Category Archives: IL-6

Zerumbone

Cancer:
Colorectal, renal carcinoma, glioblastoma, ovarian and cervical

Action: CSCs, anti-inflammatory

Zerumbone is isolated from Zingiber zerumbet [(L.) Roscoe ex Sm.].

Colorectal Cancer

Numerous agents from 'mother nature' (also called nutraceuticals) that have potential to both prevent and treat CRC have been identified. The most significant discoveries relate to compounds such as cardamonin, celastrol, curcumin, deguelin, diosgenin, thymoquinone, tocotrienol, ursolic acid, and zerumbone. Unlike pharmaceutical drugs, these agents modulate multiple targets, including transcription factors, growth factors, tumor cell survival factors, inflammatory pathways, and invasion and angiogenesis linked closely to CRC. We describe the potential of these dietary agents to suppress the growth of human CRC cells in culture and to inhibit tumor growth in animal models (Aggarwal et al., 2013).

Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs)

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are a major cause of cancer treatment failure, relapse, and drug resistance and are known to be responsible for cancer cell invasion and metastasis. The Sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling pathway is crucial to embryonic development. Intriguingly, the aberrant activation of the Shh pathway plays a critical role in developing CSCs and leads to angiogenesis, migration, invasion, and metastasis. Natural compounds and chemical structure modified derivatives from complementary and alternative medicine have received increasing attention as cancer chemo-preventives, and their anti-tumor effects have been demonstrated both in vitro and in vivo.

Compounds cyclopamine, curcumin, epigallocatechin-3-gallate, genistein, resveratrol, zerumbone, norcantharidin, and arsenic trioxide, with a focus on Shh signaling blockade, were reviewed by Huang et al. (2013) and given that Shh signaling antagonism has been clinically proven as an effective strategy against CSCs, this review may be exploitable for the development of novel anti-cancer agents from complementary and alternative medicine.

Renal Carcinoma

Sun et al. (2013) reported that zerumbone, a monosesquiterpine, shows anti-cancer effects on human RCC cells via induction of apoptosis in vitro. Human renal clear cell carcinoma 786-0 and 769-P cell lines were used as the model system. Exposure of RCC cells to zerumbone resulted in cell viability inhibition, accompanied by DNA fragmentation and increased apoptotic index. Mechanically, treatment of RCC cells with zerumbone activated caspase-3 and caspase-9 finally led to cleavage of PARR.

Taken together, our studies provided the first evidence that zerumbone imparted strong inhibitory and apoptotic effects on human RCC cells. The zerumbone-induced apoptosis might be related to the activation of the caspase cascade and deregulation of the Gli-1/Bcl-2 pathway. Our results suggest that zerumbone merit further investigation as an apoptosis inducer as well as a novel RCC chemotherapeutic agent in the clinical setting.

Glioblastoma

Zerumbone (10~50 µM) induced death of human glioblastoma multiforme (GBM8401) cells in a dose-dependent manner. Flow cytometry studies showed that zerumbone increased the percentage of apoptotic GBM cells. Zerumbone also caused caspase-3 activation and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) production. N-benzyloxycarbonyl -Val-Ala-Asp- fluoromethylketone (zVAD-fmk), a broad-spectrum caspase inhibitor, hindered zerumbone-induced cell death. Moreover, transfection of GBM8401 cells with WT IKKα reduced the zerumbone-induced decrease in Akt and FOXO1 phosphorylation. However, transfection with WT Akt decreased FOXO1, but not IKKα, phosphorylation.

The results suggest that inactivation of IKKα, followed by Akt and FOXO1 phosphorylation and caspase-3 activation, contributes to zerumbone-induced GBM cell apoptosis (Weng et al., 2012).

Ovarian and Cervical Cancer

A study by Abdelwahab et al., (2012) was designed to investigate the role of IL-6 and IL6 receptors in the cytotoxic effects of zerumbone in ovarian and cervical cancer cell lines (Caov-3 and HeLa, respectively). Exposure of both cancer cells to zerumbone or cisplatin demonstrated growth inhibition in a dose-dependent manner as determined by the MTT reduction assay. The studies conducted seem to suggest that zerumbone induces cell death by stimulating apoptosis better than cisplatin, based on the significantly higher percentage of apoptotic cells in zerumbone's treated cancer cells as compared to cisplatin. In addition, zerumbone and cisplatin arrest cancer cells at G2/M phase as analyzed by flow cytometry. These results indicated that zerumbone significantly decreased the levels of IL-6 secreted by both cancer cells.

This study concludes that the compound, zerumbone, inhibits cancer cell growth through the induction of apoptosis, arrests cell-cycle at G2/M phase and inhibits the secretion levels of IL-6 in both cancer cells.

References

Abdelwahab SI, Abdul AB, Zain ZN, Hadi AH. (2012). Zerumbone inhibits interleukin-6 and induces apoptosis and cell-cycle arrest in ovarian and cervical cancer cells. Int Immunopharmacol,12(4):594-602. doi: 10.1016/j.intimp.2012.01.014.


Aggarwal B, Prasad S, Sung B, Krishnan S, Guha S. (2013). Prevention and Treatment of Colorectal Cancer by Natural Agents From Mother Nature. Curr Colorectal Cancer Rep, 9(1):37-56.


Huang YC, Chao KS, Liao HF, Chen YJ. (2013). Targeting sonic hedgehog signaling by compounds and derivatives from natural products. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med, 2013:748587. doi: 10.1155/2013/748587.


Sun Y, Sheng Q, Cheng Y, et al. (2013). Zerumbone induces apoptosis in human renal cell carcinoma via Gli-1/Bcl-2 pathway. Pharmazie, 68(2):141-5.


Weng HY, Hsu MJ, Wang CC, et al. (2012). Zerumbone suppresses IKK α , Akt, and FOXO1 activation, resulting in apoptosis of GBM 8401 cells. J Biomed Sci, 19:86. doi: 10.1186/1423-0127-19-86.

Saikosaponin

Cancers:
Cervical, colon, liver, lung, ovarian, liver, breast, hepatocellular

Action: Anti-angiogenic, anti-metastatic, chemo-sensitizer, pro-oxidative, cell-cycle arrest

T cell-mediated autoimmune, induces apoptosis, immune regulating, radio-sensitizer

Induces Apoptosis

Long dan xie gan tang, a well known Chinese herbal formulation, is commonly used by patients with chronic liver disease in China. Accumulated anecdotal evidence suggests that Long dan tang may have beneficial effects in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. Long dan tang is comprised of five herbs: Gentiana root, Scutellaria root, Gardenia fruit, Alisma rhizome, and Bupleurum root. The cytotoxic effects of compounds from the five major ingredients isolated from the above plants, i.e. gentiopicroside, baicalein, geniposide, alisol B acetate and saikosaponin-d, respectively, on human hepatoma Hep3B cells, were investigated.

Annexin V immunofluorescence detection, DNA fragmentation assays and FACScan analysis of propidium iodide-staining cells showed that gentiopicroside, baicalein, and geniposide had little effect, whereas alisol B acetate and saikosaponin-d profoundly induced apoptosis in Hep3B cells. Alisol B acetate, but not saikosaponin-d, induced G2/M arrest of the cell-cycle as well as a significant increase in caspase-3 activity. Interestingly, baicalein by itself induced an increase in H(2)O(2) generation and the subsequent NF-kappaB activation; furthermore, it effectively inhibited the transforming growth factor-beta(1) (TGF-beta(1))-induced caspase-3 activation and cell apoptosis.

Results suggest that alisol B acetate and saikosaponin-d induced cell apoptosis through the caspase-3-dependent and -independent pathways, respectively. Instead of inducing apoptosis, baicalein inhibits TGF-beta(1)-induced apoptosis via increase in cellular H(2)O(2) formation and NF-kappaB activation in human hepatoma Hep3B cells (Chou, Pan, Teng & Guh, 2003).

Breast

Saikosaponin-A treatment of MDA-MB-231 for 3 hours and of MCF-7 cells for 2 hours, respectively, caused an obvious increase in the sub G1 population of cell-cycles.

Apoptosis in MDA-MB-231 cells was independent of the p53/p21 pathway mechanism and was accompanied by an increased ratio of Bax to Bcl-2 and c-myc levels and activation of caspase-3. In contrast, apoptosis of MCF-7 cells may have been initiated by the Bcl-2 family of proteins and involved p53/p21 dependent pathway mechanism, and was accompanied by an increased level of c-myc protein. The apoptosis of both MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cells showed a difference worthy of further research (Chen, Chang, Chung, & Chen, 2003).

Hepatocellular Carcinoma

The signaling pathway mediating induction of p15(INK4b) and p16(INK4a) during HepG2 growth inhibition triggered by the phorbol ester tumor promoter TPA (12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate) and the Chinese herbal compund Saikosaponin A was investigated.

Expressions of proto-oncogene c-jun, junB and c-fos were induced by TPA and Saikosaponin A between 30 minutes to 6 hours of treatment. Pre-treatment of 20 microg/ml PD98059, an inhibitor of MEK (the upstream kinase of ERK), prevents the TPA and Saikosaponin A triggered HepG2 growth inhibition by 50% and 30%, respectively. In addition, AP-1 DNA-binding assay, using non-isotopic capillary electrophoresis and laser-induced fluorescence (CE/LIF), demonstrated that the AP-1-related DNA-binding activity was significantly induced by TPA and Saikosaponin A, which can be reduced by PD98059 pre-treatment.

Results suggest that activation of ERK, together with its downstream transcriptional machinery, mediated p15(INK4b) and p16(INK4a) expression that led to HepG2 growth inhibition (Wen-Sheng, 2003).

The effects of Saikosaponin D (SSd) on syndecan-2, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2 (TIMP-2) in livers of rats with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was investigated.

The model group had more malignant nodules than the SSd group. Model-group HCC cells were grade III; SSd-group HCC cells were grades I-II. Controls showed normal hepatic cell phenotypes and no syndecan-2+ staining. Syndecan-2+ staining was greater in the model group (35.2%, P < or = 0.001) than in controls or the SSd group (16.5%, P < or = 0.001). The model group had more intense MMP-2+ staining than controls (0.37 vs 0.27, P< or =0.01) or the SSd group (0.31 vs 0.37, P< or =0.05); and higher MMP-13+ staining (72.55%) than in controls (12.55%, P< or =0.001) and SSd group (20.18%, P< or =0.01).

The model group also had more TIMP-2+ staining (57.2%) than controls (20.9%, P< or =0.001) and SSd group (22.7%, P< or=0.001). Controls and SSd group showed no difference in TIMP-2+ rates.

SSd inhibited HCC development, and downregulated expression of syndecan-2, MMP-2, MMP-13 and TIMP-2 in rat HCC liver tissue (Jia et al., 2012).

T Cell-mediated Autoimmune

Saikosaponin-d (Ssd) is a triterpene saponin derived from the medicinal plant, Bupleurum falcatum L. (Umbelliferae). Previous findings showed that Ssd exhibits a variety of pharmacological and immunomodulatory activities including anti-inflammatory, anti-bacterial, anti-viral and anti-cancer effects.

Results demonstrated that Ssd not only suppressed OKT3/CD28-costimulated human T cell proliferation, it also inhibited PMA, PMA/Ionomycin and Con A-induced mouse T cell activation in vitro. The inhibitory effect of Ssd on PMA-induced T cell activation was associated with down-regulation of NF-kappaB signaling through suppression of IKK and Akt activities. In addition, Ssd suppressed both DNA binding activity and the nuclear translocation of NF-AT and activator protein 1 (AP-1) of the PMA/Ionomycin-stimulated T cells. The cell surface markers, such as IL-2 receptor (CD25), were also down-regulated along with decreased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines of IL-6, TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma.

Results indicate that the NF-kappaB, NF-AT and AP-1 (c-Fos) signaling pathways are involved in the T cell inhibition evoked by Ssd. Ssd could be a potential candidate for further study in treating T cell-mediated autoimmune conditions (Wong, Zhou, Cheung, Li, & Liu, 2009).

Cervical Cancer

Saikosaponin-a and -d, two naturally occurring compounds derived from Bupleurum radix, have been shown to exert anti-cancer activity in several cancer cell lines. However, the effect of a combination of saikosaponins with chemotherapeutic drugs have never been addressed. Investigated as to whether these two saikosaponins have chemo-sensitization effect on cisplatin-induced cancer cell cytotoxicity was carried out.

Two cervical cancer cell lines, HeLa and Siha, an ovarian cancer cell line, SKOV3, and a non-small-cell lung cancer cell line, A549, were treated with saikosaponins or cisplatin individually or in combination. Cell death was quantitatively detected by the release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) using a cytotoxicity detection kit. Cellular ROS was analyzed by flow cytometry. Apoptosis was evaluated by AO/EB staining, flow cytometry after Anexin V and PI staining, and Western blot for caspase activation. ROS scavengers and caspase inhibitor were used to determine the roles of ROS and apoptosis in the effects of saikosaponins on cisplatin-induced cell death.

Both saikosaponin-a and -d sensitized cancer cells to cisplatin-induced cell death in a dose-dependent manner, which was accompanied with induction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation.

Results suggest that saikosaponins sensitize cancer cells to cisplatin through ROS-mediated apoptosis, and the combination of saikosaponins with cisplatin could be an effective therapeutic strategy (Wang et al., 2010).

Colon Cancer

Saikosaponin-a (SSa)-induced apoptosis of HCC cells was associated with proteolytic activation of caspase-9, caspase-3, and PARP cleavages and decreased levels of IAP family members, such as XIAP and c-IAP-2, but not of survivin. SSa treatment also enhanced the activities of caspase-2 and caspase-8, Bid cleavage, and the conformational activation of Bax. Moreover, inhibition of caspase-2 activation by the pharmacological inhibitor z-VDVAD-fmk, or by knockdown of protein levels using a si-RNA, suppressed SSa-induced caspase-8 activation, Bid cleavage, and the conformational activation of Bax. Although caspase-8 is an initiator caspase like caspase-2, the inhibition of caspase-8 activation by knockdown using a si-RNA did not suppress SSa-induced caspase-2 activation.

Results suggest that sequential activation of caspase-2 and caspase-8 is a critical step in SSa-induced apoptosis (Kim & Hong, 2011).

Immune Regulating

Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF- α ) was reported as an anti-cancer therapy due to its cytotoxic effect against an array of tumor cells. However, its undesirable responses of TNF- α on activating NF- κB signaling and pro-metastatic property limit its clinical application in treating cancers. Therefore, sensitizing agents capable of overcoming this undesirable effect must be valuable for facilitating the usage of TNF- α -mediated apoptosis therapy for cancer patients. Previously, saikosaponin-d (Ssd), a triterpene saponin derived from the medicinal plant, Bupleurum falcatum L. (Umbelliferae), exhibited a variety of pharmacological activities such as anti-inflammatory, anti-bacterial, anti-viral and anti-cancer.

Investigation found that Ssd could potentially inhibit activated T lymphocytes via suppression of NF- κ B, NF-AT and AP-1 signaling. Ssd significantly potentiated TNF- α -mediated cell death in HeLa and HepG2 cancer cells via suppression of TNF- α -induced NF- κ B activation and its target genes expression involving cancer cell proliferation, invasion, angiogenesis and survival. Also, Ssd revealed a significant potency in abolishing TNF- α -induced cancer cell invasion and angiogenesis in HUVECs while inducing apoptosis via enhancing the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential in HeLa cells.

Collectively, findings indicate that Ssd has significant potential to be developed as a combined adjuvant remedy with TNF- α for cancer patients (Wong et al., 2013).

Radio-sensitizer

Saikosaponin-d (SSd), a monomer terpenoid purified from the Chinese herbal drug Radix bupleuri, has multiple effects, including anti-cancer properties. Treatment with SSd alone and radiation alone inhibited cell growth and increased apoptosis rate at the concentration used. These effects were enhanced when SSd was combined with radiation. Moreover, SSd potentiated the effects of radiation to induce G0/G1 arrest in SMMC-7721 hepatocellular carcinoma cells, and reduced the G2/M-phase population under hypoxia. SSd potentiates the effects of radiation on SMMC-7721 cells; thus, it is a promising radio-sensitizer. The radio-sensitizing effect of SSd may contribute to its effect on the G0/G1 and G2/M checkpoints of the cell-cycle (Wang et al., 2013).

References

Chen JC, Chang NW, Chung JG, Chen KC. (2003). Saikosaponin-A induces apoptotic mechanism in human breast MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cancer cells. The American Journal of Chinese Medicine, 31(3), 363-77.


Chou CC, Pan SL, Teng CM, Guh JH. (2003). Pharmacological evaluation of several major ingredients of Chinese herbal medicines in human hepatoma Hep3B cells. European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 19(5), 403-12.


Jia X, Dang S, Cheng Y, et al. (2012). Effects of saikosaponin-d on syndecan-2, matrix metalloproteinases and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2 in rats with hepatocellular carcinoma. Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine, 32(3), 415-22.


Kim BM, Hong SH. (2011). Sequential caspase-2 and caspase-8 activation is essential for saikosaponin a-induced apoptosis of human colon carcinoma cell lines. Apoptosis, 16(2), 184-197. doi: 10.1007/s10495-010-0557-x.


Wang BF, Dai ZJ, Wang XJ, et al. (2013). Saikosaponin-d increases the radiosensitivity of smmc-7721 hepatocellular carcinoma cells by adjusting the g0/g1 and g2/m checkpoints of the cell-cycle. BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 13:263. doi:10.1186/1472-6882-13-263


Wang Q, Zheng XL, Yang L, et al. (2010). Reactive oxygen species-mediated apoptosis contributes to chemo-sensitization effect of saikosaponins on cisplatin-induced cytotoxicity in cancer cells. Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research, 9(29), 159. doi: 10.1186/1756-9966-29-159.


Wen-Sheng, W. (2003). ERK signaling pathway is involved in p15INK4b/p16INK4a expression and HepG2 growth inhibition triggered by TPA and Saikosaponin A. Oncogene, 22(7), 955-963.


Wong VK, Zhang MM, Zhou H, et al. (2013). Saikosaponin-d Enhances the Anti-cancer Potency of TNF- α via Overcoming Its Undesirable Response of Activating NF-Kappa B Signaling in Cancer Cells. Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2013(2013), 745295. doi: 10.1155/2013/745295.


Wong VK, Zhou H, Cheung SS, Li T, Liu L. (2009). Mechanistic study of saikosaponin-d (Ssd) on suppression of murine T lymphocyte activation. Journal of Cellular Biochemistry, 107(2), 303-15. doi: 10.1002/jcb.22126.

Paenol

Cancer: Gastric

Action: Attenuates nephrotoxicity, anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant, inhibits TNF- α , induces apoptosis, COX-2 down-regulation

Inhibits TNF- α

Moutan Cortex, the root bark of Paeonia suffruticosa Andrews, has been used extensively as a traditional medicine for treatment of various diseases such as atherosclerosis, infection, and inflammation. Previous studies have revealed that the extracts of Moutan Cortex can inhibit nitric oxide and TNF- α in activated mouse peritoneal macrophages (Chung et al., 2007).

A variety of compounds including paeonoside, paeonolide, apiopaeonoside, paeoniflorin, oxypaeoniflorin, benzoyloxypaeoniflorin, benzoylpaeoniflorin, paeonol, and sugars have been identified in Moutan Cortex (Chen et al., 2006).

Attenuates Nephrotoxicity

Paeonol, a major compound of Moutan Cortex, has been found to attenuate cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity in mice. Cisplatin is an effective chemotherapeutic agent that is used for the treatment of a variety of cancers; however, its nephrotoxicity limits the use of this drug.

Balb/c mice (6 to 8  w of age, weighing 20 to 25  g) were administered with Moutan Cortex (300  mg/kg) or paeonol (20 mg/kg) once a day. At day 4, mice received cisplatin (30, 20, or 10   mg/kg) intraperitoneally.

The paeonol-treated group showed marked attenuation of serum creatine and blood urea nitrogen levels as well as reduced levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines and nitric oxide when compared to the control group. In addition, the paeonol-treated group showed prolonged survival and marked attenuation of renal tissue injury. Taken together, these results demonstrated that paeonol can prevent the renal toxic effects of cisplatin (Lee et al., 2013).

Paeonol, a major phenolic component of Moutan Cortex, has various biological activities such as anti-aggregatory, anti-oxidant, anxiolytic-like, and anti-inflammatory functions (Ishiguro et al., 2006). In this study, paeonol treatment significantly reduced the elevated levels of serum creatinine and BUN. In addition, the role of pro-inflammatory cytokines in cisplatin-induced acute renal failure has been well documented (Faubel et al., 2007; Ramesh & Reeves, 2002), and elevation of the pro-inflammatory cytokines TNF-α and IL-1β as well as that of IL-6 has been demonstrated in humans with acute renal failure (Simmons et al., 2004).

Apoptosis-inducing & Gastric Cancer

Paeonol has significantly growth-inhibitory and apoptosis-inducing effects in gastric cancer cells both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro, paeonol caused dose-dependent inhibition on cell proliferation and induced apoptosis. Cell cycle analysis revealed a decreased proportion of cells in G0/G1 phase, with arrest at S. Paeonol treatment in gastric cancer cell line MFC and SGC-790 cells significantly reduced the expression of Bcl-2 and increased the expression of Bax in a concentration-related manner. Administration of paeonol to MFC tumor-bearing mice significantly lowered the tumor growth and caused tumor regression (Li et al., 2010).

COX-2 Down-regulation

One of the apoptotic mechanisms of paeonol is down-regulation of COX-2. p27 is up-regulated simultaneously and plays an important part in controlling cell proliferation and is a crucial factor in the Fas/FasL apoptosis pathway. Cell proliferation was inhibited by different concentrations of paeonol. By immunocytochemical staining, Ye et al. (2009) found that HT-29 cells treated with paeonol (0.024-1.504 mmol/L) reflected reduced expression of COX-2 and increased expression of p27 in a dose-dependent manner. RT-PCR showed that paeonol down-regulated COX-2 and up-regulated p27 in a dose- and time-dependent manner in HT-29 cells.

References

Chen G, Zhang L, Zhu Y. (2006). Determination of glycosides and sugars in moutan cortex by capillary electrophoresis with electrochemical detection. Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis, 41(1):129–134.


Chung HS, M. Kang, C. Cho et al. (2007). Inhibition of nitric oxide and tumor necrosis factor-alpha by moutan cortex in activated mouse peritoneal macrophages. Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 30(5):912–916.


Faubel F, Lewis EC, Reznikov L et al. (2007). Cisplatin-induced acute renal failure is associated with an increase in the cytokines interleukin (IL)-1 β , IL-18, IL-6, and neutrophil infiltration in the kidney. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 322(1):8–15.


Ishiguro K, Ando T, Maeda O et al. (2006). Paeonol attenuates TNBS-induced colitis by inhibiting NF- κ B and STAT1 transactivation. Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 217(1):35–42.


Lee HJ, Lee GY, Kim Hs, Bae Hs. (2013). Paeonol, a Major Compound of Moutan Cortex, Attenuates Cisplatin-Induced Nephrotoxicity in Mice. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2013(2013), http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/310989


Li N, Fan LL, Sun GP, et al. (2010). Paeonol inhibits tumor growth in gastric cancer in vitro and in vivo. World J Gastroenterol., 16(35):4483-90.


Ramesh G, Reeves wb. (2002). TNF- α mediates chemokine and cytokine expression and renal injury in cisplatin nephrotoxicity. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 110(6):835–842.


Simmons EM, Himmelfarb j, Sezer MT et al. (2004). Plasma cytokine levels predict mortality in patients with acute renal failure. Kidney International, 65(4):1357–1365.


Ye JM, Deng T, Zhang JB. (2009) Influence of paeonol on expression of COX-2 and p27 in HT-29 cells. World J Gastroenterol, 15(35):4410-4.

Nomilin

Cancer: Melanoma, breast cancer

Action: Anti-angiogenic

Nomilin is a triterpenoid present in common edible citrus fruits (Citrus grandis [(L.) Osb.], Citrus unshiu [(Swingle) Marcow.] and Citrus reticulata (Blanco)) with putative anti-cancer properties.

Melanoma

Nomilin possess anti-metastatic action, inducing metastasis in C57BL/6 mice through the lateral tail vein using highly metastatic B16F-10 melanoma cells. Administration of nomilin inhibited tumor nodule formation in the lungs (68%) and markedly increased the survival rate of the metastatic tumor–bearing animals. Nomilin showed an inhibition of tumor cell invasion and activation of matrix metalloproteinases. Treatment with nomilin induced apoptotic response.

Nomilin treatment also exhibited a down-regulated Bcl-2 and cyclin-D1 expression and up-regulated p53, Bax, caspase-9, caspase-3, p21, and p27 gene expression in B16F-10 cells. Pro-inflammatory cytokine production and gene expression were found to be down-regulated in nomilin-treated cells. The study also reveals that nomilin could inhibit the activation and nuclear translocation of anti-apoptotic transcription factors such as nuclear factor (NF)-κB, CREB, and ATF-2 in B16F-10 cells (Pratheeshkumar et al., 2011).

Breast Cancer; ER+

A panel of 9 purified limonoids, including limonin, nomilin, obacunone, limonexic acid (LNA), isolimonexic acid (ILNA), nomilinic acid glucoside (NAG), deacetyl nomilinic acid glucoside (DNAG), limonin glucoside (LG) and obacunone glucoside (OG) as well as 4 modified compounds such as limonin methoxime (LM), limonin oxime (LO), defuran limonin (DL), and defuran nomilin (DN), were screened for their cytotoxicity on estrogen receptor (ER)-positive (MCF-7) or ER-negative (MDA-MB-231) human breast cancer cells. Findings indicated that the citrus limonoids may have potential for the prevention of estrogen-responsive breast cancer (MCF-7) via caspase-7 dependent pathways (Lin et al., 2013).

Blocks Angoigenesis

Nomilin significantly inhibited tumor-directed capillary formation. Serum pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α and GM-CSF and also serum NO levels were significantly reduced by the treatment of nomilin. Administration of nomilin significantly reduced the serum level of VEGF, a pro-angiogenic factor and increased the anti-angiogenic factors IL-2 and TIMP-1. Nomilin significantly retarded endothelial cell proliferation, migration, invasion and tube formation. These data clearly demonstrate the anti-angiogenic potential of nomilin by down-regulating the activation of MMPs, production of VEGF, NO and pro-inflammatory cytokines as well as up-regulating IL-2 and TIMP (Pratheeshkumar et al., 2011).

References

Kim J, Jayaprakasha GK, Patil BS. (2013). Limonoids and their anti-proliferative and anti-aromatase properties in human breast cancer cells. Food Funct, 4(2):258-65. doi: 10.1039/c2fo30209h.


Pratheeshkumar P, Raphael TJ & Kuttan G. (2011). Nomilin Inhibits Metastasis via Induction of Apoptosis and Regulates the Activation of Transcription Factors and the Cytokine Profile in B16F-10 Cells. Integr Cancer Ther. doi: 10.1177/1534735411403307


Pratheeshkumar P, Kuttan G. (2011). Nomilin inhibits tumor-specific angiogenesis by down-regulating VEGF, NO and pro-inflammatory cytokine profile and also by inhibiting the activation of MMP-2 and MMP-9. Eur J Pharmacol, 668(3):450-8. doi: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2011.07.029.

Naringin

Cancer: TNBCa, melanoma, breast, colon, cervical

Action: Anti-inflammatory, anti-carcinogenic

Citrus plants are known to possess beneficial biological activities for human health. The total phenolics and flavonoids from a methanolic extract contained high total phenolics and flavonoids compared to ethanolic and boiling water extracts of Citrus aurantium. The anti-inflammatory result of methanolic extract showed appreciable reduction in nitric oxide production of stimulated RAW 264.7 cells at the presence of plant extract.

Breast Cancer, Colon Cancer

The anti-cancer activity of the methanolic extract of Citrus aurantium was investigated in vitro against human cancer cell lines; breast cancer MCF-7; MDA-MB-231 cell lines, human colon adenocarcinoma HT-29 cell line and Chang cell as a normal human hepatocyte. The obtained result demonstrated the moderate to appreciable activities against all cell lines tested and the compounds present in the extracts are non-toxic which make them suitable as potential therapeutics (Karimi et al., 2012).

Triple Negative (ER-/PR-/HER2-)

Breast Cancer (TNBCa)

Camargo et al. (2012) demonstrated that naringin inhibited cell proliferation, and promoted cell apoptosis and G1 cycle arrest, accompanied by increased p21 and decreased survivin. Meanwhile, β-catenin signaling pathway was found to be suppressed by naringin.

Levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) are raised in patients with TNBCa. Inhibition of tumor growth, survival increase and the reduction of TNF-α and IL-6 levels in rats bearing W256 treated with naringin strongly suggest that this compound has potential as an anti-carcinogenic drug.

Results indicate that naringin could inhibit growth potential of Triple-negative (ER-/PR-/HER2-) breast cancer (TNBC) by modulating -catenin pathway, which suggests naringin might be used as a potential supplement for the prevention and treatment of breast cancer (Li et al., 2013).

Cervical Cancer

Fruit-based cancer prevention entities, such as flavonoids and their derivatives, have demonstrated a marked ability to inhibit preclinical models of epithelial cancer cell growth and tumor formation. Ramesh & Alshatwi (2013) looked at the role of naringin-mediated chemo-prevention in relation to cervical carcinogenesis. The results suggest that the induction of apoptosis by naringin is through both death-receptor and mitochondrial pathways. Taken together, our results suggest that naringin might be an effective agent to treat human cervical cancer.

Melanoma

A study by Huang, Yang, Chiou (2011) investigated the molecular events of melanogenesis induced by naringenin in murine B16-F10 melanoma cells. Melanin content, tyrosinase activity and Western blot analysis were performed to elucidate the possible underlying mechanisms. Exposure of melanoma cells to naringenin resulted in morphological changes accompanied by the induction of melanocyte differentiation-related markers, such as melanin synthesis, tyrosinase activity, and the expression of tyrosinase and microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF). They concluded that naringenin induced melanogenesis through the Wnt-β-catenin-signaling pathway.

References

Camargo CA, Gomes-Marcondes MC, Wutzki NC, Aoyama H. (2013). Naringin inhibits tumor growth and reduces interleukin-6 and tumor necrosis factor α levels in rats with Walker 256 carcinosarcoma. Anti-cancer Res, 32(1):129-33.


Huang YC, Yang CH, Chiou YL. (2011). Citrus flavanone naringenin enhances melanogenesis through the activation of Wnt/ β -catenin signaling in mouse melanoma cells. Phytomedicine. 18(14):1244-9. doi: 10.1016/j.phymed.2011.06.028.


Karimi E, Oskoueian E, Hendra R, Oskoueian A, Jaafar HZ. (2012). Phenolic compounds characterization and biological activities of Citrus aurantium bloom. Molecules, 17(2):1203-18. doi: 10.3390/molecules17021203.


Li HZ, Yang B, Huang J, et al. (2013). Naringin inhibits growth potential of human triple-negative breast cancer cells by targeting -catenin signaling pathway. Toxicology Letters, 220(2013):219-228


Ramesh E, Alshatwi AA. (2013). Naringin induces death receptor and mitochondria-mediated apoptosis in human cervical cancer (SiHa) cells. Food Chem Toxicol. 51:97-105. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2012.07.033.

Magnolol

Cancer:
Bladder, breast, colon, prostate, glioblastoma, ovarian, leukemia, lung

Action: Anti-inflammatory, apoptosis, inhibits angiogenesis, anti-metastatic

Magnolol (Mag), an active constituent isolated from the Chinese herb hou po (Magnolia officinalis (Rehder & Wilson)) has long been used to suppress inflammatory processes. It has anti-cancer activity in colon, hepatoma, and leukemia cell lines.

Anti-inflammatory

Magnolol (Mag) suppressed IL-6-induced promoter activity of cyclin D1 and monocyte chemotactic protein (MCP)-1 for which STAT3 activation plays a role. Pre-treatment of ECs with Mag dose-dependently inhibited IL-6-induced Tyr705 and Ser727 phosphorylation in STAT3 without affecting the phosphorylation of JAK1, JAK2, and ERK1/2. Mag pre-treatment of these ECs dose-dependently suppressed IL-6-induced promoter activity of intracellular cell adhesion molecule (ICAM)-1 that contains functional IL-6 response elements (IREs).

In conclusion, our results indicate that Mag inhibits IL-6-induced STAT3 activation and subsequently results in the suppression of downstream target gene expression in ECs. These results provide a therapeutic basis for the development of Mag as an anti-inflammatory agent for vascular disorders including atherosclerosis (Chen et al., 2006).

Bladder Cancer; Inhibits Angiogenesis

In the present study, Chen et al. (2013) demonstrated that magnolol significantly inhibited angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo, evidenced by the attenuation of hypoxia and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-induced tube formation of human umbilical vascular endothelial cells, vasculature generation in chicken chorioallantoic membrane, and Matrigel plug.

In hypoxic human bladder cancer cells (T24), treatment with magnolol inhibited hypoxia-stimulated H2O2 formation, HIF-1α induction including mRNA, protein expression, and transcriptional activity as well as VEGF secretion. Interestingly, magnolol also acts as a VEGFR2 antagonist, and subsequently attenuates the downstream AKT/mTOR/p70S6K/4E-BP-1 kinase activation both in hypoxic T24 cells and tumor tissues. As expected, administration of magnolol greatly attenuated tumor growth, angiogenesis and the protein expression of HIF-1α, VEGF, CD31, a marker of endothelial cells, and carbonic anhydrase IX, an endogenous marker for hypoxia, in the T24 xenograft mouse model.

Collectively, these findings strongly indicate that the anti-angiogenic activity of magnolol is, at least in part, mediated by suppressing HIF-1α/VEGF-dependent pathways, and suggest that magnolol may be a potential drug for human bladder cancer therapy.

Colon Cancer; Induces Apoptosis

Emerging evidence has suggested that activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a potential cancer therapeutic target, is involved in apoptosis in colon cancer cells. However, the effects of magnolol on human colon cancer through activation of AMPK remain unexplored.

Magnolol displayed several apoptotic features, including propidium iodide labeling, DNA fragmentation, and caspase-3 and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavages. Park et al. (2012) showed that magnolol induced the phosphorylation of AMPK in dose- and time-dependent manners.

Magnolol down-regulated expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl2, up-regulated expression of pro-apoptotic protein p53 and Bax, and caused the release of mitochondrial cytochrome c. Magnolol-induced p53 and Bcl2 expression was abolished in the presence of compound C. Magnolol inhibited migration and invasion of HCT-116 cells through AMPK activation. These findings demonstrate that AMPK mediates the anti-cancer effects of magnolol through apoptosis in HCT-116 cells.

Ovarian Cancer

Treatment of HER-2 overexpressing ovarian cancer cells with magnolol down-regulated the HER-2 downstream PI3K/Akt signaling pathway, and suppressed the expression of downstream target genes, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2) and cyclin D1. Consistently, magnolol-mediated inhibition of MMP2 activity could be prevented by co-treatment with epidermal growth factor. Migration assays revealed that magnolol treatment markedly reduced the motility of HER-2 overexpressing ovarian cancer cells. These findings suggest that magnolol may act against HER-2 and its downstream PI3K/Akt/mTOR-signaling network, thus resulting in suppression of HER-2mediated transformation and metastatic potential in HER-2 overexpressing ovarian cancers. These results provide a novel mechanism to explain the anti-cancer effect of magnolol (Chuang et al., 2011).

Lung Cancer

Magnolol has been found to inhibit cell growth, increase lactate dehydrogenase release, and modulate cell cycle in human lung carcinoma A549 cells. Magnolol induced the activation of caspase-3 and cleavage of Poly-(ADP)-ribose polymerase, and decreased the expression level of nuclear factor-κB/Rel A in the nucleus. In addition, magnolol inhibited basic fibroblast growth factor-induced proliferation and capillary tube formation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells. These data indicate that magnolol is a potential candidate for the treatment of human lung carcinoma (Seo et al., 2011).

Prostate Cancer; Anti-metastatic

Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are enzymes involved in various steps of metastasis development. The objective of this study was to study the effects of magnolol on cancer invasion and metastasis using PC-3 human prostate carcinoma cells. Magnolol inhibited cell growth in a dose-dependent manner. In an invasion assay conducted in Transwell chambers, magnolol showed 33 and 98% inhibition of cancer cell at 10 microM and 20 microM concentrations, respectively, compared to the control. The protein and mRNA levels of both MMP-2 and MMP-9 were down-regulated by magnolol treatment in a dose-dependent manner.

These results demonstrate the anti-metastatic properties of magnolol in inhibiting the adhesion, invasion, and migration of PC-3 human prostate cancer cells (Hwang et al., 2010).

Glioblastoma Cancer

Magnolol has been found to concentration-dependently (0-40 microM) decrease the cell number in a cultured human glioblastoma cancer cell line (U373) and arrest the cells at the G0/G1 phase of the cell-cycle.

Pre-treatment of U373 with p21/Cip1 specific antisense oligodeoxynucleotide prevented the magnolol-induced increase of p21/Cip1 protein levels and the decrease of DNA synthesis. Magnolol at a concentration of 100 microM induced DNA fragmentation in U373. These findings suggest the potential applications of magnolol in the treatment of human brain cancers (Chen et al. 2011).

Inhibits Angiogenesis

Magnolol inhibited VEGF-induced Ras activation and subsequently suppressed extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt and p38, but not Src and focal adhesion kinase (FAK). Interestingly, the knockdown of Ras by short interfering RNA produced inhibitory effects that were similar to the effects of magnolol on VEGF-induced angiogenic signaling events, such as ERK and Akt/eNOS activation, and resulted in the inhibition of proliferation, migration, and vessel sprouting in HUVECs.

In combination, these results demonstrate that magnolol is an inhibitor of angiogenesis and suggest that this compound could be a potential candidate in the treatment of angiogenesis-related diseases (Kim et al., 2013).

References

Chen LC, Liu YC, Liang YC, Ho YS, Lee WS. (2009). Magnolol inhibits human glioblastoma cell proliferation through up-regulation of p21/Cip1. J Agric Food Chem, 57(16):7331-7. doi: 10.1021/jf901477g.


Chen MC, Lee CF, Huang WH, Chou TC. (2013). Magnolol suppresses hypoxia-induced angiogenesis via inhibition of HIF-1 α /VEGF signaling pathway in human bladder cancer cells. Biochem Pharmacol, 85(9):1278-87. doi: 10.1016/j.bcp.2013.02.009.


Chen SC, Chang YL, Wang DL, Cheng JJ. (2006). Herbal remedy magnolol suppresses IL-6-induced STAT3 activation and gene expression in endothelial cells. Br J Pharmacol, 148(2): 226–232. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0706647


Chuang TC, Hsu SC, Cheng YT, et al. (2011). Magnolol down-regulates HER2 gene expression, leading to inhibition of HER2-mediated metastatic potential in ovarian cancer cells. Cancer Lett, 311(1):11-9. doi: 10.1016/j.canlet.2011.06.007.


Hwang ES, Park KK. (2010). Magnolol suppresses metastasis via inhibition of invasion, migration, and matrix metalloproteinase-2/-9 activities in PC-3 human prostate carcinoma cells. Biosci Biotechnol Biochem, 74(5):961-7.


Kim KM, Kim NS, Kim J, et al. (2013). Magnolol Suppresses Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor-Induced Angiogenesis by Inhibiting Ras-Dependent Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase and Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase/Akt Signaling Pathways. Nutr Cancer.


Park JB, Lee MS, Cha EY, et al. (2012). Magnolol-induced apoptosis in HCT-116 colon cancer cells is associated with the AMP-activated protein kinase signaling pathway. Biol Pharm Bull, 35(9):1614-20.


Seo JU, Kim MH, Kim HM, Jeong HJ. (2011). Anti-cancer potential of magnolol for lung cancer treatment. Arch Pharm Res, 34(4):625-33. doi: 10.1007/s12272-011-0413-8.

Dietary Flavones

Cancer:
Prostate, colorectal., breast, pancreatic, bladder, ovarian, leukemia, liver, glioma, osteosarcoma, melanoma

Action: Anti-inflammatory, TAM resistance, cancer stem cells, down-regulate COX-2, apoptosis, cell-cycle arrest, anti-angiogenic, chemo-sensitzer, adramycin (ADM) resistance

Sulforaphane, Phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC), quercetin, epicatechin, catechin, Luteolin, apigenin

Anti-inflammatory

The anti-inflammatory activities of celery extracts, some rich in flavone aglycones and others rich in flavone glycosides, were tested on the inflammatory mediators tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB) in lipopolysaccharide-stimulated macrophages. Pure flavone aglycones and aglycone-rich extracts effectively reduced TNF-α production and inhibited the transcriptional activity of NF-κB, while glycoside-rich extracts showed no significant effects.

Celery diets with different glycoside or aglycone contents were formulated and absorption was evaluated in mice fed with 5% or 10% celery diets. Relative absorption in vivo was significantly higher in mice fed with aglycone-rich diets as determined by HPLC-MS/MS (where MS/MS is tandem mass spectrometry). These results demonstrate that deglycosylation increases absorption of dietary flavones in vivo and modulates inflammation by reducing TNF-α and NF-κB, suggesting the potential use of functional foods rich in flavones for the treatment and prevention of inflammatory diseases (Hostetler et al., 2012).

Colorectal Cancer

Association between the 6 main classes of flavonoids and the risk of colorectal cancer was examined using data from a national prospective case-control study in Scotland, including 1,456 incident cases and 1,456 population-based controls matched on age, sex, and residence area.

Dietary, including flavonoid, data were obtained from a validated, self-administered food frequency questionnaire. Risk of colorectal cancer was estimated using conditional logistic regression models in the whole sample and stratified by sex, smoking status, and cancer site and adjusted for established and putative risk factors.

The significant dose-dependent reductions in colorectal cancer risk that were associated with increased consumption of the flavonols quercetin, catechin, and epicatechin, remained robust after controlling for overall fruit and vegetable consumption or for other flavonoid intake. The risk reductions were greater among nonsmokers, but no interaction beyond a multiplicative effect was present.

This was the first of several a priori hypotheses to be tested in this large study and showed strong and linear inverse associations of flavonoids with colorectal cancer risk (Theodoratou et al., 2007).

Anti-angiogenic, Prostate Cancer

Luteolin is a common dietary flavonoid found in fruits and vegetables. The anti-angiogenic activity of luteolin was examined using in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo models. Angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels from pre-existing vascular beds, is essential for tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis; hence, examination of this mechanism of tumor growth is essential to understanding new chemo-preventive targets. In vitro studies using rat aortic ring assay showed that luteolin at non-toxic concentrations significantly inhibited microvessel sprouting and proliferation, migration, invasion and tube formation of endothelial cells, which are key events in the process of angiogenesis. Luteolin also inhibited ex vivo angiogenesis as revealed by chicken egg chorioallantoic membrane assay (CAM) and matrigel plug assay.

Pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α level were significantly reduced by the treatment of luteolin in PC-3 cells. Luteolin (10 mg/kg/d) significantly reduced the volume and the weight of solid tumors in prostate xenograft mouse model, indicating that luteolin inhibited tumorigenesis by targeting angiogenesis. Moreover, luteolin reduced cell viability and induced apoptosis in prostate cancer cells, which were correlated with the down-regulation of AKT, ERK, mTOR, P70S6K, MMP-2, and MMP-9 expressions.

Taken together, these findings demonstrate that luteolin inhibits human prostate tumor growth by suppressing vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2-mediated angiogenesis (Pratheeshkumar et al., 2012).

Pancreatic Cancer; Chemo-sensitizer

The potential of dietary flavonoids apigenin (Api) and luteolin (Lut) were assessed in their ability to enhance the anti-proliferative effects of chemotherapeutic drugs on BxPC-3 human pancreatic cancer cells; additionally, the molecular mechanism of the action was probed.

Simultaneous treatment with either flavonoid (0,13, 25 or 50µM) and chemotherapeutic drugs 5-fluorouracil (5-FU, 50µM) or gemcitabine (Gem, 10µM) for 60 hours resulted in less-than-additive effect (p<0.05). Pre-treatment for 24 hours with 13µM of either Api or Lut, followed by Gem for 36 hours was optimal to inhibit cell proliferation. Pre-treatment of cells with 11-19µM of either flavonoid for 24 hours resulted in 59-73% growth inhibition when followed by Gem (10µM, 36h). Lut (15µM, 24h) pre-treatment followed by Gem (10µM, 36h), significantly decreased protein expression of nuclear GSK-3β and NF-κB p65 and increased pro-apoptotic cytosolic cytochrome c. Pre-treatment of human pancreatic cancer cells BxPC-3 with low concentrations of Api or Lut hence effectively aid in the anti-proliferative activity of chemotherapeutic drugs (Johnson et al., 2013).

Breast Cancer; Chemo-sensitizer, Tamoxifen

The oncogenic molecules in human breast cancer cells are inhibited by luteolin treatment and it was found that the level of cyclin E2 (CCNE2) mRNA was higher in tumor cells than in normal paired tissue samples as assessed using real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis (n=257).

Combined treatment with 4-OH-TAM and luteolin synergistically sensitized the TAM-R cells to 4-OH-TAM. These results suggest that luteolin can be used as a chemo-sensitizer to target the expression level of CCNE2 and that it could be a novel strategy to overcome TAM resistance in breast cancer patients (Tu et al., 2013).

Breast Cancer

Consumers of higher levels of Brassica vegetables, particularly those of the genus Brassica (broccoli, Brussels sprouts and cabbage), reduce their susceptibility to cancer at a variety of organ sites. Brassica vegetables contain high concentrations of glucosinolates that can be hydrolyzed by the plant enzyme, myrosinase, or intestinal microflora to isothiocyanates, potent inducers of cytoprotective enzymes and inhibitors of carcinogenesis. Oral administration of either the isothiocyanate, sulforaphane, or its glucosinolate precursor, glucoraphanin, inhibits mammary carcinogenesis in rats treated with 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene. To determine whether sulforaphane exerts a direct chemo-preventive action on animal and human mammary tissue, the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of a single 150 µmol oral dose of sulforaphane were evaluated in the rat mammary gland.

Sulforaphane metabolites were detected at concentrations known to alter gene expression in cell culture. Elevated cytoprotective NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1) and heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) gene transcripts were measured using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. An observed 3-fold increase in NQO1 enzymatic activity, as well as 4-fold elevated immunostaining of HO-1 in rat mammary epithelium, provide strong evidence of a pronounced pharmacodynamic action of sulforaphane. In a subsequent pilot study, eight healthy women undergoing reduction mammoplasty were given a single dose of a broccoli sprout preparation containing 200 µmol of sulforaphane. Following oral dosing, sulforaphane metabolites were readily measurable in human breast tissue enriched for epithelial cells. These findings provide a strong rationale for evaluating the protective effects of a broccoli sprout preparation in clinical trials of women at risk for breast cancer (Cornblatt et al., 2007).

In a proof of principle clinical study, the presence of disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) was demonstrated in human breast tissue after a single dose of a broccoli sprout preparation containing 200 µmol of sulforaphane. Together, these studies demonstrate that sulforaphane distributes to the breast epithelial cells in vivo and exerts a pharmacodynamic action in these target cells consistent with its mechanism of chemo-protective efficacy.

Such efficacy, coupled with earlier randomized clinical trials revealing the safety of repeated doses of broccoli sprout preparations , supports further evaluation of broccoli sprouts in the chemoprevention of breast and other cancers (Cornblatt et al., 2007).

CSCs

Recent research into the effects of sulforaphane on cancer stem cells (CSCs) has drawn a great deal of interest. CSCs are suggested to be responsible for initiating and maintaining cancer, and to contribute to recurrence and drug resistance. A number of studies have indicated that sulforaphane may target CSCs in different types of cancer through modulation of NF- κB, SHH, epithelial-mesenchymal transition and Wnt/β-catenin pathways. Combination therapy with sulforaphane and chemotherapy in preclinical settings has shown promising results (Li et al., 2013).

Anti-inflammatory

Sulforaphane has been found to down-regulate COX-2 expression in human bladder transitional cancer T24 cells at both transcriptional- and translational levels. Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) overexpression has been associated with the grade, prognosis and recurrence of transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder. Sulforaphane (5-20 microM) induced nuclear translocation of NF-kappaB and reduced its binding to the COX-2 promoter, a key mechanism for suppressing COX-2 expression by sulforaphane. Moreover, sulforaphane increased expression of p38 and phosphorylated-p38 protein. Taken together, these data suggest that p38 is essential in sulforaphane-mediated COX-2 suppression and provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms of sulforaphane in the chemoprevention of bladder cancer (Shan et al., 2009).

Bladder Cancer

An aqueous extract of broccoli sprouts potently inhibits the growth of human bladder carcinoma cells in culture and this inhibition is almost exclusively due to the isothiocyanates. Isothiocyanates are present in broccoli sprouts as their glucosinolate precursors and blocking their conversion to isothiocyanates abolishes the anti-proliferative activity of the extract.

Moreover, the potency of isothiocyanates in the extract in inhibiting cancer cell growth was almost identical to that of synthetic sulforaphane, as judged by their IC50 values (6.6 versus 6.8 micromol/L), suggesting that other isothiocyanates in the extract may be biologically similar to sulforaphane and that nonisothiocyanate substances in the extract may not interfere with the anti-proliferative activity of the isothiocyanates. These data show that broccoli sprout isothiocyanate extract is a highly promising substance for cancer prevention/treatment and that its anti-proliferative activity is exclusively derived from isothiocyanates (Tang et al., 2006).

Ovarian Cancer

Sulforaphane is an extract from the mustard family recognized for its anti-oxidation abilities, phase 2 enzyme induction, and anti-tumor activity. The cell-cycle arrest in G2/M by sulforaphane and the expression of cyclin B1, Cdc2, and the cyclin B1/CDC2 complex in PA-1 cells using Western blotting and co-IP Western blotting. The anti-cancer effects of dietary isothiocyanate sulforaphane on ovarian cancer were investigated using cancer cells line PA-1.

Sulforaphane -treated cells accumulated in metaphase by CDC2 down-regulation and dissociation of the cyclin B1/CDC2 complex.

These findings suggest that, in addition to the known effects on cancer prevention, sulforaphane may also provide anti-tumor activity in established ovarian cancer (Chang et al., 2013).

Leukemia Stem Cells

Isolated leukemia stem cells (LSCs) showed high expression of Oct4, CD133, β-catenin, and Sox2 and imatinib (IM) resistance. Differentially, CD34(+)/CD38(-) LSCs demonstrated higher BCR-ABL and β-catenin expression and IM resistance than CD34(+)/CD38(+) counterparts. IM and sulforaphane (SFN) combined treatment sensitized CD34(+)/CD38(-) LSCs and induced apoptosis, shown by increased caspase 3, PARP, and Bax while decreased Bcl-2 expression. Mechanistically, imatinib (IM) and sulforaphane (SFN) combined treatment resensitized LSCs by inducing intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS). Importantly, β-catenin-silenced LSCs exhibited reduced glutathione S-transferase pi 1 (GSTP1) expression and intracellular GSH level, which led to increased sensitivity toward IM and sulforaphane.

It was hence demonstrated that IM and sulforaphane combined treatment effectively eliminated CD34(+)/CD38(-) LSCs. Since SFN has been shown to be well tolerated in both animals and human, this regimen could be considered for clinical trials (Lin et al., 2012).

DCIS Stem Cells

A miR-140/ALDH1/SOX9 axis has been found to be critical to basal cancer stem cell self-renewal and tumor formation in vivo, suggesting that the miR-140 pathway may be a promising target for preventive strategies in patients with basal-like Ductal Carcinoma in Situ (DCIS). The dietary compound sulforaphane has been found to decrease Transcription factor SOX-9 and Acetaldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDH1), and thereby reduced tumor growth in vivo (Li et al., 2013).

Glioma, Prostate Cancer, Colon Cancer, Breast Cancer, Liver Cancer

Phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC), a natural dietary isothiocyanate, inhibits angiogenesis. The effects of PEITC were examined under hypoxic conditions on the intracellular level of the hypoxia inducible factor (HIF-1α) and extracellular level of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in a variety of human cancer cell lines. Gupta et al., (2013) observed that PEITC suppressed the HIF-1α accumulation during hypoxia in human glioma U87, human prostate cancer DU145, colon cancer HCT116, liver cancer HepG2, and breast cancer SkBr3 cells. PEITC treatment also significantly reduced the hypoxia-induced secretion of VEGF.

Suppression of HIF-1α accumulation during treatment with PEITC in hypoxia was related to PI3K and MAPK pathways.

Taken together, these results suggest that PEITC inhibits the HIF-1α expression through inhibiting the PI3K and MAPK signaling pathway and provide a new insight into a potential mechanism of the anti-cancer properties of PEITC.

Breast Cancer Metastasis

Breast tumor metastasis is a leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Breast tumor cells frequently metastasize to brain and initiate severe therapeutic complications. The chances of brain metastasis are further elevated in patients with HER2 overexpression. The MDA-MB-231-BR (BR-brain seeking) breast tumor cells stably transfected with luciferase were injected into the left ventricle of mouse heart and the migration of cells to brain was monitored using a non-invasive IVIS bio-luminescent imaging system.

Results demonstrate that the growth of metastatic brain tumors in PEITC treated mice was about 50% less than that of control. According to Kaplan Meir's curve, median survival of tumor-bearing mice treated with PEITC was prolonged by 20.5%. Furthermore, as compared to controls, we observed reduced HER2, EGFR and VEGF expression in the brain sections of PEITC treated mice. These results demonstrate the anti-metastatic effects of PEITC in vivo in a novel breast tumor metastasis model and provides the rationale for further clinical investigation (Gupta et al., 2013).

Osteosarcoma, Melanoma

Phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) has been found to induce apoptosis in human osteosarcoma U-2 OS cells. The following end points were determined in regard to human malignant melanoma cancer A375.S2 cells: cell morphological changes, cell-cycle arrest, DNA damage and fragmentation assays and morphological assessment of nuclear change, reactive oxygen species (ROS) and Ca2+ generations, mitochondrial membrane potential disruption, and nitric oxide and 10-N-nonyl acridine orange productions, expression and activation of caspase-3 and -9, B-cell lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2)-associated X protein (Bax), Bcl-2, poly (adenosine diphosphate-ribose) polymerase, and cytochrome c release, apoptosis-inducing factor and endonuclease G. PEITC

It was therefore concluded that PEITC-triggered apoptotic death in A375.S2 cells occurs through ROS-mediated mitochondria-dependent pathways (Huang et al., 2013).

Prostate Cancer

The glucosinolate-derived phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) has recently been demonstrated to reduce the risk of prostate cancer (PCa) and inhibit PCa cell growth. It has been shown that p300/CBP-associated factor (PCAF), a co-regulator for the androgen receptor (AR), is upregulated in PCa cells through suppression of the mir-17 gene. Using AR-responsive LNCaP cells, the inhibitory effects of PEITC were observed on the dihydrotestosterone-stimulated AR transcriptional activity and cell growth of PCa cells.

Expression of PCAF was upregulated in PCa cells through suppression of miR-17. PEITC treatment significantly decreased PCAF expression and promoted transcription of miR-17 in LNCaP cells. Functional inhibition of miR-17 attenuated the suppression of PCAF in cells treated by PEITC. Results indicate that PEITC inhibits AR-regulated transcriptional activity and cell growth of PCa cells through miR-17-mediated suppression of PCAF, suggesting a new mechanism by which PEITC modulates PCa cell growth (Yu et al., 2013).

Bladder Cancer; Adramycin (ADM) Resistance

The role of PEITC on ADM resistance reversal of human bladder carcinoma T24/ADM cells has been examined, including an increased drug sensitivity to ADM, cell apoptosis rates, intracellular accumulation of Rhodamine-123 (Rh-123), an increased expression of DNA topoisomerase II (Topo-II), and a decreased expression of multi-drug resistance gene (MDR1), multi-drug resistance-associated protein (MRP1), bcl-2 and glutathione s transferase π (GST-π). The results indicated that PEITC might be used as a potential therapeutic strategy to ADM resistance through blocking Akt and activating MAPK pathway in human bladder carcinoma (Tang et al., 2013).

Breast Cancer; Chemo-enhancing

The synergistic effect between paclitaxel (taxol) and phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) on the inhibition of breast cancer cells has been examined. Two drug-resistant breast cancer cell lines, MCF7 and MDA-MB-231, were treated with PEITC and taxol. Cell growth, cell-cycle, and apoptosis were examined.

The combination of PEITC and taxol significantly decreased the IC50 of PEITC and taxol over each agent alone. The combination also increased apoptosis by more than 2-fold over each single agent in both cell lines. A significant increase of cells in the G2/M phases was detected. Taken together, these results indicated that the combination of PEITC and taxol exhibits a synergistic effect on growth inhibition in breast cancer cells. This combination deserves further study in vivo (Liu et al., 2013).

References

Chang CC, Hung CM, Yang YR, Lee MJ, Hsu YC. (2013). Sulforaphane induced cell-cycle arrest in the G2/M phase via the blockade of cyclin B1/CDC2 in human ovarian cancer cells. J Ovarian Res, 6(1):41. doi: 10.1186/1757-2215-6-41


Cornblatt BS, Ye LX, Dinkova-Kostova AT, et al. (2007). Preclinical and clinical evaluation of sulforaphane for chemoprevention in the breast. Carcinogenesis, 28(7):1485-1490. doi: 10.1093/carcin/bgm049


Gupta B, Chiang L, Chae K, Lee DH. (2013). Phenethyl isothiocyanate inhibits hypoxia-induced accumulation of HIF-1 α and VEGF expression in human glioma cells. Food Chem, 141(3):1841-6. doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.05.006.


Gupta P, Adkins C, Lockman P, Srivastava SK. (2013). Metastasis of Breast Tumor Cells to Brain Is Suppressed by Phenethyl Isothiocyanate in a Novel In Vivo Metastasis Model. PLoS One, 8(6):e67278. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0067278


Hostetler G, Riedl K, Cardenas H, et al. (2012). Flavone deglycosylation increases their anti-inflammatory activity and absorption. Molecular Nutrition & Food Research, 56(4):558-569. doi: 10.1002/mnfr.201100596


Huang SH, Hsu MH, Hsu SC, et al. (2013). Phenethyl isothiocyanate triggers apoptosis in human malignant melanoma A375.S2 cells through reactive oxygen species and the mitochondria-dependent pathways. Hum Exp Toxicol. doi: 10.1177/0960327113491508


Johnson JL, Gonzalez de Mejia E. (2013). Interactions between dietary flavonoids apigenin or luteolin and chemotherapeutic drugs to potentiate anti-proliferative effect on human pancreatic cancer cells, in vitro. Food Chem Toxicol, 60:83-91. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2013.07.036.


Li Q, Yao Y, Eades G, Liu Z, Zhang Y, Zhou Q. (2013). Down-regulation of miR-140 promotes cancer stem cell formation in basal-like early stage breast cancer. Oncogene. doi: 10.1038/onc.2013.226.


Li Y, Zhang T. (2013). Targeting cancer stem cells with sulforaphane, a dietary component from broccoli and broccoli sprouts. Future Oncol, 9(8):1097-103. doi: 10.2217/fon.13.108.


Lin LC, Yeh CT, Kuo CC, et al. (2012). Sulforaphane potentiates the efficacy of imatinib against chronic leukemia cancer stem cells through enhanced abrogation of Wnt/ β-catenin function. J Agric Food Chem, 60(28):7031-9. doi: 10.1021/jf301981n.


Liu K, Cang S, Ma Y, Chiao JW. (2013). Synergistic effect of paclitaxel and epigenetic agent phenethyl isothiocyanate on growth inhibition, cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in breast cancer cells. Cancer Cell Int, 13(1):10. doi: 10.1186/1475-2867-13-10.


Pratheeshkumar P, Son YO, Budhraja A, et al. (2012). Luteolin inhibits human prostate tumor growth by suppressing vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2-mediated angiogenesis. PLoS One, 7(12):52279. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0052279.


Tang K, Lin Y, Li LM. (2013). The role of phenethyl isothiocyanate on bladder cancer ADM resistance reversal and its molecular mechanism. Anat Rec (Hoboken), 296(6):899-906. doi: 10.1002/ar.22677.


Tang L, Zhang Y, Jobson HE, et al. (2006). Potent activation of mitochondria-mediated apoptosis and arrest in S and M phases of cancer cells by a broccoli sprout extract. Mol Cancer Ther, 5(4):935-44. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-05-0476


Theodoratou E, Kyle J, Cetnarskyj R, et al. (2007). Dietary flavonoids and the risk of colorectal cancer. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev,16(4):684-93.


Tu SH, Ho CT, Liu MF, et al. (2013). Luteolin sensitizes drug-resistant human breast cancer cells to tamoxifen via the inhibition of cyclin E2 expression. Food Chem, 141(2):1553-61. doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.04.077.


Shan Y, Wu K, Wang W, et al. (2009). Sulforaphane down-regulates COX-2 expression by activating p38 and inhibiting NF-kappaB-DNA-binding activity in human bladder T24 cells. Int J Oncol, 34(4):1129-34.


Yu C, Gong AY, Chen D, et al. (2013). Phenethyl isothiocyanate inhibits androgen receptor-regulated transcriptional activity in prostate cancer cells through suppressing PCAF. Mol Nutr Food Res. doi: 10.1002/mnfr.201200810.

Qingkailing

Cancer: Leukemia, sarcoma

Action: Antibiotic, anti-apoptotic, anti-inflammatory, neuro-protective, pro-apoptotic, immunomodulating, MMPs regulation

Anti-inflammatory and Immunomodulating

Qingkailing and Shuanghuanglian (SHHL) are two commonly used Chinese herbal preparations with reported anti-inflammatory activity. The effects of these two preparations on the capacity of staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome toxin 1 (TSST-1), to stimulate the production of cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, IFN-γ) and chemokines (MIP-1α, MIP-1β and MCP-1) by peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC), was tested. Their effect on LPS-stimulated NF-κB transcriptional activity in a THP-1 cell line, and on human monocyte chemotactic response to chemoattractants, was also evaluated.

The results suggested that the pharmacological basis for the anti-inflammatory effects of Qingkailing and SHHL is the result of suppression of NF-κB regulated gene transcription, leading to suppressed production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. Interference with leukocyte chemotaxis also contributes to the anti-inflammatory and immunomodulating effects of these medicinals. Identification of the responsible components in these two herbal preparations may yield compounds suitable for structural modification into potent novel drugs (Chen et al., 2002).

Leukemia

The MTT assay, cell morphology, DNA gel electrophoresis, and flow-cytometry were utilized to study the apoptotic effect of Qingkailing, and its active compounds, on the human acute promyelocytic leukemia (HL-60) cell line.

Qingkailing and its active compounds, Baicalin and hyodeoxycholic acid, exhibited strong cytotoxicity in inhibiting HL-60 cells, while Bezoar cholic acid showed a weaker effect. Apoptosis could be induced after being treated for 6 h by the former two compounds, displaying a typical apoptosis peak under flow-cytometry, but could not be induced by the latter.

Qingkailing could induce apoptosis in leukemia cells in vitro, which could serve as a mechanism of Qingkailing in the treatment of acute promyelocytic leukemia (Chen, Dong, & Zhang, 2001).

Qingkailing injection could prevent the decrease of MMP induced by injury of hypoxia-hypoglycemia-reoxygenation, stabilize MMP, inhibit cell apoptosis, and protect hippocampal neurons (Tsing, 2006).

Matrix Metalloproteinases (MMPs) Regulation

Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) play vital roles in many pathological conditions, including cancer, cardiovascular disease, arthritis and inflammation. Modulating MMP activity may therefore be a useful therapeutic approach in treating these diseases. Qingkailing is a popular Chinese anti-inflammatory formulation used to treat symptoms such as rheumatoid arthritis, acute hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage, hepatitis and upper respiratory tract infection.

One of the components of Qingkailing, Fructus gardeniae, strongly inhibits MMP activity. The IC50 values for the primary herbal extract and water extract against MMP-16 were 32 and 27 µg/ml, respectively. In addition, the herbal extracts influenced HT1080 human fibrosarcoma cell growth and morphology.

These data may provide molecular mechanisms for the therapeutic effects of Qingkailing and herbal medicinal Fructus gardenia (Yang et al., 2008).

Sources

Chen X, Howard OM, Yang X, Wang L, Oppenheim JJ, Krakauer T. (2002). Effects of Shuanghuanglian and Qingkailing, two multi-components of traditional Chinese medicinal preparations, on human leukocyte function. Life Sciences, 70(24), 2897-2913.


Chen ZT, Dong Q, Zhang L. (2001). Study on the effect of Qingkailing injection and its active principle in inducing cell apoptosis in human acute promyelocytic leukemia. Chinese Journal of Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine, 21(11), 840-842.


Tsing H. (2006). Influences of Qingkailing Injection on neuron apoptosis and mitochondrial membrane potential. Journal of Beijing University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, 2006(2), R285.5.


Yang JG, Shen YH, Hong Y, Jin FH, Zhao SH, Wang MC, Shi XJ,   Fang XX. (2008). Stir-baked Fructus gardeniae (L.) extracts inhibit matrix metalloproteinases and alter cell morphology. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 117(2), 285-289.

Oxymatrine or Compound Matrine (Ku Shen)

Cancer: Sarcoma, pancreatic, breast, liver, lung, oral., rectal., stomach, leukemia, adenoid cystic carcinoma

Action: Anti-inflammatory, anti-proliferative, chemo-sensitizer, chemotherapy support, cytostatic, radiation support, anti-angiogenesis

Ingredients: ku shen (Sophora flavescens), bai tu ling (Heterosmilax chinensis).

TCM functions: Clearing Heat, inducing diuresis, cooling Blood, removing Toxin, dispersing lumps and relieving pain (Drug Information Reference in Chinese: See end, 2000-12).

Indications: Pain and bleeding caused by cancer.

Dosage and usage:

Intramuscular injection: 2-4 ml each time, twice daily; intravenous drip: 12 ml mixed in 200 ml NaCl injection, once daily. The total amount of 200 ml administration makes up a course of treatment. 2-3 consecutive courses can be applied.

Anti-cancer

Oxymatrine, isolated from the dried roots of Sophora flavescens (Aiton), has a long history of use in traditional Chinese medicine to treat inflammatory diseases and cancer. Kushen alkaloids (KS-As) and kushen flavonoids (KS-Fs) are well-characterized components in kushen. KS-As containing oxymatrine, matrine, and total alkaloids have been developed in China as anti-cancer drugs. More potent anti-tumor activities were identified in KS-Fs than in KS-As in vitro and in vivo (Sun et al., 2012). The four major alkaloids in compound Ku Shen injection are matrine, sophoridine, oxymatrine and oxysophocarpine (Qi, Zhang, & Zhang, 2013).

Sarcoma

When a high dose was used, the tumor-inhibitory rate of oxymatrine was 31.36%, and the vascular density of S180 sarcoma was lower than that in the control group and the expression of VEGF and bFGF was down-regulated. Oxymatrine hence has an inhibitory effect on S180 sarcoma and strong inhibitory effects on angiogenesis. Its mechanism may be associated with the down-regulating of VEGF and bFGF expression (Kong et al., 2003).

T Cell Leukemia

Matrine, a small molecule derived from the root of Sophora flavescens AIT was demonstrated to be effective in inducing T cell anergy in human T cell leukemia Jurkat cells.

The results showed that passage of the cells, and concentration and stimulation time of ionomycin on the cells could influence the ability of T cell anergy induction.

The cells exposed to matrine showed markedly decreased mRNA expression of interleukin-2, an indicator of T cell anergy. Pre-incubation with matrine or ionomycin could also shorten extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and suppress c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK) expression on the anergic Jurkat cells when the cells were stimulated with anti-OKT-3 plus anti-CD28 antibodies. Thus, matrine is a strong candidate for further investigation as a T cell immunotolerance inducer (Li et al., 2010).

Osteosarcoma

Results showed that treatment with oxymatrine resulted in a significant inhibition of cell proliferation and DNA synthesis in a dose-dependent manner, which has been attributed to apoptosis. Oxymatrine considerably inhibited the expression of Bcl-2 whilst increasing that of Bax.

Oxymatrine significantly suppressed tumor growth in female BALB/C nude mice bearing osteosarcoma MNNG/HOS xenograft tumors. In addition, no evidence of drug-related toxicity was identified in the treated animals by comparing the body weight increase and mortality (Zhang et al., 2013).

Pancreatic Cancer

Oxymatrine decreased the expression of angiogenesis-associated factors, including nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Finally, the anti-proliferative and anti-angiogenic effects of oxymatrine on human pancreatic cancer were further confirmed in pancreatic cancer xenograft tumors in nude mice (Chen et al., 2013).

Furthermore, oxymatrine treatment led to the release of cytochrome c and activation of caspase-3 proteins. Oxymatrine can induce apoptotic cell death of human pancreatic cancer, which might be attributed to the regulation of Bcl-2 and IAP families, release of mitochondrial cytochrome c and activation of caspase-3 (Ling et al., 2011).

Rectal Carcinoma

Eighty-four patients diagnosed with rectal carcinoma at the People”s Hospital of Yichun city in Jiangxi province from September 2006 to September 2011, were randomly divided into two groups: therapeutic group and control group. The patients in the therapeutic group were treated with compound matrine and intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) (30 Gy/10 f/2 W), while the patients in control group were treated with IMRT.

The clinical effect and survival rate in the therapeutic group were significantly higher (47.6%) than those in the control group (21.4%). All patients were divided by improvement, stability, and progression of disease in accordance with Karnofsky Performance Scale (KPS). According to the KPS, 16 patients had improvement, 17 stabilized and 9 had disease progress in the therapeutic group.

However, the control group had 12 improvements, 14 stabilized, and 16 disease progress. Quality of life in the therapeutic group was higher than that in the control group by rank sum test. The level of sIL-2R and IL-8 in the therapeutic group was lower on the first and 14th day, post radiation, when compared to the control group. However, there was no significant difference on the first day and 14th day, between both experimental groups post therapy, according to the student test. Compound matrine can decrease the side-effects of IMRT, significantly inhibit sIL-2R and IL-8 in peripheral blood from radiation, and can improve survival quality in patients with rectal cancer (Yin et al., 2013).

Gastric Cancer

Seventy-six cases of advanced gastric cancer were collected from June 2010 to November 2011, and randomly divided into either an experimental group or control group. Patients in the two groups were treated with matrine injection combined with SP regimen, or SP regimen alone, respectively. The effectiveness rate of the experimental group and control group was 57.5% and 52.8% respectively.

The treatment of advanced gastric cancer with matrine injection, combined with the SP regimen, can significantly improve levels of white blood cells and hemoglobin, liver function, incidence of diarrhea and constipation, and neurotoxicity, to improve the quality of life in patients with advanced gastric cancer (Xia, 2013).

Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma

Adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC-2) cells were cultured in vitro. MTT assay was used to measure the cell proliferative effect. Compound radix Sophorae flavescentis injection could inhibit the proliferation of ACC-2 cells in vitro, and the dosage effect relationship was significant (P < 0.01). Radix Sophorae flavescentis injection could enhance ACC-2 cells Caspase-3 protein expression (P < 0.05 or P < 0.01), in a dose-dependent manner. It also could effectively restrain human adenoid cystic carcinoma ACC-2 cells Caspases-3 protein expression, and induce apoptosis, inhibiting tumor cell proliferation (Shi & Hu, 2012).

Breast Cancer; Chemotherapy

A retrospective analysis of oncological data of 70 postoperative patients with breast cancer from January 2008 to August 2011 was performed. According to the treatment method, the patients were divided into a therapy group (n=35) or control group (n=35). Patients in the control group were treated with the taxotere, adriamycin and cyclophosphamide regimen (TAC). The therapy group was treated with a combination of TAC and sophora root injection. Improved quality of life and incidence of adverse events, before and after treatment, for 2 cycles (21 days for a cycle) were compared.

The improvement rate of total quality of life in the therapy group was higher than that of the control group (P < 0.05). The drop of white blood cells and platelets, gastrointestinal reaction, elevated SGPT, and the incidence of hair loss in the therapy group were lower than those of the control group (P < 0.05).

Sophora root injection combined with chemotherapy in treatment of breast cancer can enhance the effect of chemotherapy, reduce toxicity and side-effects, and improve quality of life (An, An, & Wu, 2012).

Lung cancer; Pleural Effusion

The therapeutic efficiency of Fufang Kushen Injection Liquid (FFKSIL), IL-2, α-IFN on lung cancer accompanied with malignancy pleural effusions, was observed.

One hundred and fifty patients with lung cancer, accompanied with pleural effusions, were randomly divided into treatment and control groups. The treatment group was divided into three groups: injected FFKSIL plus IL-2, FFKSIL plus α-tFN, and IL-2 plus α>-IFN, respectively. The control group was divided into three groups and injected FFKSIL, IL-2 and α>-IFN, respectively. The effective rate of FFKSIL, IL-2, and α-IFN in a combination was significantly superior to single pharmacotherapy. The effective rate of fufangkushen plus ct-IFN was highest. The effect of FFKSIL, IL-2, and α-IFN, in a combination, on lung cancer with pleural effusions was significantly better than single pharmacotherapy. Moreover, the effect of FFKSIL plus IL-2 or α-IFN had the greatest effect (Hu & Mei, 2012).

Gastric Cancer

Administration of FFKSIL significantly enhanced serum IgA, IgG, IgM, IL-2, IL-4 and IL-10 levels, decreased serum IL-6 and TNF-αlevels, lowered the levels of lipid peroxides and enhanced GSH levels and activities of GSH-dependent enzymes. Our results suggest that FFKSIL blocks experimental gastric carcinogenesis by protecting against carcinogen-induced oxidative damage and improving immunity activity (Zhou et al., 2012).

Colorectal Cancer; Chemotherapy

Eighty patients after colorectal cancer resection were randomly divided into two groups: 40 patients in the control group were treated with routine chemotherapy including 5-fluorouridine(5-FU), calcium folinate(CF) and oxaliplatin, and 40 patients in the experimental group were treated with the same chemotherapy regime combined with 20 mLád-1 compound Kushen injection, for 10d during chemotherapy. In the control group the numbers of CD3+,CD4+T cells,NK cells and CD4+/CD8+ ratio significantly declined relative to prior to chemotherapy (P < 0.05), while CD8+T lymphocyte number increased significantly. In the experimental group, there were no significant differences between the numbers of CD3+,CD4+,CD8+T cells ,NK cells, and CD4+/CD8+ ratio, before and after chemotherapy (P > 0.05).

Compound Kushen injection can improve the immunologic function of patients receiving chemotherapy after colorectal cancer resection (Chen, Yu, Yuan, & Yuan, 2009).

NSCLC; Chemotherapy

A total of 286 patients with advanced NSCLC were enrolled for study. The patients were treated with either compound Kushen injection in combination with NP (NVB + CBP) chemotherapy (vinorelbine and carboplatin, n = 144), or with NP (NVB + CBP) chemotherapy alone (n = 142). The following indicators were observed: levels of Hb, WBC, PLT and T cell subpopulations in blood, serum IgG level, short-term  efficacy, adverse effects and quality of life.

The gastrointestinal reactions and the myelosuppression in the combination chemotherapy group were alleviated when compared with the chemotherapy alone group, showing a significant difference (P < 0.05). CD (8)(+) cells were markedly declined in the combination chemotherapy group, and the CD (4)(+)/CD (8)(+) ratio showed an elevation trend in the chemotherapy alone group. The Karnofsky Performance Scale (KPS) scores and serum IgM and IgG levels were higher in the combination chemotherapy group than those in the chemotherapy alone group (P < 0.01 and P < 0.05).

The compound Kushen injection plus NP chemotherapy regimen showed better therapeutic effect, reduced adverse effects of chemotherapy and improved the quality of life in patients with stage III and IV NSCLC (Fan et al., 2010).

Lung Adenocarcinoma

Different concentrations of matrine injection could inhibit the growth of SPCA/I human lung adenocarcinoma cells. There was a positive correlation between the inhibition rate and the drug concentration. Different concentrations of matrine injection combined with anti-tumor drugs had a higher growth inhibition rate than anti-tumor drugs alone. Matrine injection has direct growth suppression effect on SPCA/I human lung adenocarcinoma cells and SS+ injection combined with anti-tumor drugs shows a significant synergistic effect on tumor cells (Zhu, Jiang, Lu, Guo, & Gan, 2008).

Liver Cancer

Fifty-seven patients with unresectable primary liver cancer were randomly divided into 2 groups. The treatment group with 27 cases was treated by TACE combined with composite Kushen injection, and the control group with 30 cases was treated by TACE alone. One, two, and three year survival rates of the treatment group were 67%, 48%, and 37% respectively, and those of control group were 53%, 37%, and 20% respectively. There were significant differences between both groups (P < 0.05).

Combined TACE with composite Kushen injection can increase the efficacy of patients with unresectable primary liver cancer (Wang & Cheng, 2009).

Chemotherapy

Ten RCTs were included in a meta-analysis, whose results suggest that compared with chemotherapy alone, the combination had a statistically significant benefit in healing efficacy and improving quality of life. As well,  the combination also had a statistically significant benefit in myelosuppression, white blood cell, hematoblast, liver function and in reducing the gastroenteric reaction, decreasing the of CD3, CD4, CD4/CD8, and NK cells (Huang et al., 2011).

Colorectal Cancer, NSCLC, Breast Cancer; Chemotherapy

Fufang kushen Injection might improve the efficacies of chemotherapy in patients with colorectal cancer, NSCLC and breast cancer.

The results of a meta-analysis of 33 studies of randomized controlled trials with a total of 2,897 patients demonstrated that the short-term efficacies in patients with colorectal cancer, NSCLC, and breast cancer receiving Fufangkushen Injection plus chemotherapy were significantly better than for those receiving chemotherapy alone. However the results for patients with gastric cancer on combined chemotherapy were not significantly different from those for patients on chemotherapy alone (Fang, Lin, & Fan, 2011).

References

An, A.J., An, G.W., & Wu, Y.C. (2012). Observation of compound recipe light yellow Sophora root injection combined with chemotherapy in treatment of 35 postoperative patients with breast cancer. Medical & Pharmaceutical Journal of Chinese People”s Liberation Army, 24(10), 43-46. doi: 10.3969/j.issn.2095-140X.2012.10.016.


Chen, G., Yu, B., Yuan, S.J., & Yuan, Q. (2009). Effects of compound Kushen injection on the immunologic function of patients after colorectal cancer resection. Evaluation and Analysis of Drug-Use in Hospitals of China, 2009(9), R735.3. doi: cnki:sun:yypf.0.2009-09-025.


Chen H, Zhang J, Luo J, et al. (2013). Anti-angiogenic effects of oxymatrine on pancreatic cancer by inhibition of the NF-κB-mediated VEGF signaling pathway. Oncol Rep, 30(2):589-95. doi: 10.3892/or.2013.2529.


Fan, C.X., Lin, C.L., Liang, L., Zhao, Y.Y., Liu, J., Cui, J., Yang, Q.M., Wang, Y.L., & Zhang, A.R. (2010). Enhancing effect of compound Kushen injection in combination with chemotherapy for patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. Chinese Journal of Oncology, 32(4), 294-297.


Fang, L., Lin, N.M., Fan, Y. (2011). Short-term  efficacies of Fufangkushen Injection plus chemotherapy in patients with solid tumors: a meta-analysis of randomized trials. Zhonghua Yi Xue Za Zhi, 91(35):2476-81.


Hu, D.J., & Mei, X.D. (2012). Observing therapeutic efficiency of fufangkushen injection, IL-2, α-IFN on lung cancer accompanied with malignancy pleural effusions. Journal of Clinical Pulmonology, 17(10), 1844-1845.


Huang S, Fan W, Liu P, Tian J. (2011). Meta-analysis of compound matrine injection combined with cisplatin chemotherapy for advanced gastric cancer. Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi, 36(22):3198-202.


Kong, Q-Z., Huang, D-S., Huang, T. et al. (2003). Experimental study on inhibiting angiogenesis in mice S180 by injections of three traditional Chinese herbs. Chinese Journal of Hospital Pharmacy, 2003-11. doi: CNKI:SUN:ZGYZ.0.2003-11-002


Li T, Wong VK, Yi XQ, et al. (2010). Matrine induces cell anergy in human Jurkat T cells through modulation of mitogen-activated protein kinases and nuclear factor of activated T-cells signaling with concomitant up-regulation of anergy-associated genes expression. Biol Pharm Bull, 33(1):40-6.


Ling Q, Xu X, Wei X, et al. (2011). Oxymatrine induces human pancreatic cancer PANC-1 cells apoptosis via regulating expression of Bcl-2 and IAP families, and releasing of cytochrome c. J Exp Clin Cancer Res, 30:66. doi: 10.1186/1756-9966-30-66.


Qi, L., Zhang, J., Zhang, Z. (2013). Determination of four alkaloids in Compound Kushen Injection by high performance liquid chromatography with ionic liquid as mobile phase additive. Chinese Journal of Chromatography, 31(3): 249-253. doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1123.2012.10039.


Shi, B., & Xu, H. (2012). Effects of compound radix Sophorae flavescentis injection on proliferation, apoptosis and caspase-3 expression in adenoid cystic carcinoma ACC-2 cells. Chinese Pharmacological Bulletin, 5(10), 721-724.


Sun M, Cao H, Sun L, et al. (2012). Anti-tumor activities of kushen: literature review. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med, 2012:373219. doi: 10.1155/2012/373219.


Wang, H.M., & Cheng, X.M. (2009). Composite Ku Shen injection combined with hepatic artery embolism on unresectable primary liver cancer. Modern Journal of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine, 18(2), 1334–1335.


Xia, G. (2013). Clinical observation of compound matrine injection combined with SP regimen in advanced gastric cancer. Journal of Liaoning Medical University, 2013(1), 37-38.


Yin, W.H., Sheng, J.W., Xia, H.M., Chen, J., Wu, Y.W., & Fan, H.Z. (2013). Study on the effect of compound matrine on the level of sIL-2R and IL-8 in peripheral blood cells of patients with rectal cancer to radiation. Global Traditional Chinese Medicine, 2013(2), 100-104.


Zhang Y, Sun S, Chen J, et al. (2013). Oxymatrine induces mitochondria dependent apoptosis in human osteosarcoma MNNG/HOS cells through inhibition of PI3K/Akt pathway. Tumor Biol.


Zhou, S-K., Zhang, R-L., Xu, Y-F., Bi, T-N. (2012) Anti-oxidant and Immunity Activities of Fufang Kushen Injection Liquid. Molecules 2012, 17(6), 6481-6490; doi:10.3390/molecules17066481


Zhu, M.Y., Jiang, Z.H., Lu, Y.W., Guo, Y., & Gan, J.J. (2008). Matrine and anti-tumor drugs in inhibiting the growth of human lung cancer cell line. Journal of Chinese Integrative Medicine, 6(2), 163-165. doi: 10.3736/jcim20080211.

Luteolin

Cancer: Colorectal., pancreatic, ovarian, breast

Action: Anti-inflammatory, radio-protective, TAM chemo-sensitizer

Luteolin is a flavonoid found in many plants and foods, including Terminalia chebula (Retz.), Prunella vulgaris (L.) and Perilla frutescens [(L.) Britton].

Luteolin is contained in Ocimum sanctum L. or Ocimum tenuiflorum L, commonly known as Holy Basil in English or Tulsi in various Indian languages; it is an important medicinal plant in the various traditional and folk systems of medicine in Southeast Asia. Scientific studies have shown it to possess anti-inflammatory, anti-analgesic, anti-pyretic, anti-diabetic, hepato-protective, hypolipidemic, anti-stress, and immunomodulatory activities. It has been found to prevent chemical-induced skin, liver, oral., and lung cancers and mediates these effects by increasing the anti-oxidant activity, altering the gene expressions, inducing apoptosis, and inhibiting angiogenesis and metastasis.

Radio-protective

The aqueous extract of Tulsi has been shown to protect mice against γ-radiation-induced sickness and mortality and to selectively protect the normal tissues against the tumoricidal effects of radiation. The chemo-preventive and radio-protective properties of Tulsi emphasize aspects that warrant future research to establish its activity and utility in cancer prevention and treatment (Baliga et al., 2013).

Anti-inflammatory

Pre-treatment of RAW 264.7 with luteolin, luteolin-7-glucoside, quercetin, and the isoflavonoid genistein inhibited both the LPS-stimulated TNF-αand interleukin-6 release, whereas eriodictyol and hesperetin only inhibited TNF-αrelease. From the compounds tested luteolin and quercetin were the most potent in inhibiting cytokine production with an IC50 of less than 1 and 5 µM for TNF-αrelease, respectively. Pre-treatment of the cells with luteolin attenuated LPS-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of many discrete proteins. Luteolin inhibited LPS-induced phosphorylation of Akt. Treatment of macrophages with LPS resulted in increased IκB-αphosphorylation and reduced the levels of IκB-α. It was concluded that luteolin inhibits protein tyrosine phosphorylation, nuclear factor-κB-mediated gene expression and pro-inflammatory cytokine production in murine macrophages (Xagorari et al., 2001).

Luteolin (Lut) possesses significant anti-inflammatory activity in well established models of acute and chronic inflammation, such as xylene-induced ear edema in mice (ED50= 107 mg/ kg), carrageenin-induced swellingof the ankle, acetic acid-induced pleurisy and croton oil-induced gaseous pouch granuloma in rats. Its combined immunostimulatory and anti-inflammatory activity, and inhibitory effect upon immediate hypersensitive response provide the pharmacologic bases for the beneficial effects of Lut in the treatment of chronic bronchitis (Chen et al., 1986).

Anti-inflammatory; Lung

Luteolin dose-dependently inhibited the expression and production of nitric oxide (NO) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), as well as the expression of inducible NO synthase (iNOS), cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), and interleukin-6 (IL-6). Luteolin also reduced the DNA binding activity of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) in LPS-activated macrophages. Moreover, luteolin blocked the degradation of IκB-α and nuclear translocation of NF-κB p65 subunit.

In sum, these data suggest that, by blocking NF-κ>B and AP-1 activation, luteolin acts to suppress the LPS-elicited inflammatory events in mouse alveolar macrophages, and this effect was mediated, at least in part, by inhibiting the generation of reactive oxygen species. These observations suggest a possible therapeutic application of this agent for treating inflammatory disorders in the lung (Chen et al., 2007).

Anti-inflammatory; Neuroinflammation

Pre-treatment of primary murine microglia and BV-2 microglial cells with luteolin inhibited LPS-stimulated IL-6 production at both the mRNA and protein levels. Whereas luteolin had no effect on the LPS-induced increase in NF-κB DNA binding activity, it markedly reduced AP-1 transcription factor binding activity. To determine whether luteolin might have similar effects in vivo, mice were provided drinking water supplemented with luteolin for 21 days and then they were injected i.p. with LPS. Luteolin consumption reduced LPS-induced IL-6 in plasma 4 hours after injection. Taken together, these data suggest luteolin inhibits LPS-induced IL-6 production in the brain by inhibiting the JNK signaling pathway and activation of AP-1 in microglia. Thus, luteolin may be useful for mitigating neuroinflammation (Jang et al., 2008).

Colon Cancer

Activities of CDK4 and CDK2 decreased within 2 hours after luteolin treatment, with a 38% decrease in CDK2 activity (P < 0.05) observed in cells treated with 40 µmol/l luteolin. Luteolin inhibited CDK2 activity in a cell-free system, suggesting that it directly inhibits CDK2.

tLuteolin promoted G2/M arrest at 24 hours post-treatment  by down-regulating cyclin B1 expression and inhibiting cell division cycle (CDC)2 activity. Luteolin promoted apoptosis with increased activation of caspases 3, 7, and 9 and enhanced poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and decreased expression of p21CIP1/WAF1, survivin, Mcl-1, Bcl-xL, and Mdm-2. Decreased expression of these key antiapoptotic proteins could contribute to the increase in p53-independent apoptosis that was observed in HT-29 cells. Lim et al., (2007) demonstrated that luteolin promotes both cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in the HT-29 colon cancer cell line, providing insight about the mechanisms underlying its anti-tumorigenic activities.

Pancreatic Cancer; Chemotherapy

Simultaneous treatment or pre-treatment (0, 6, 24 and 42 hours) of flavonoids and chemotherapeutic drugs and various concentrations (0-50µM) were assessed using the MTS cell proliferation assay. Simultaneous treatment with either flavonoid (0,13, 25 or 50µM) and chemotherapeutic drugs 5-fluorouracil (5-FU, 50µM) or gemcitabine (Gem, 10µM) for 60h resulted in less-than-additive effect (p<0.05). Pre-treatment for 24 hours with 13µM of either Api or Lut, followed by Gem for 36 hours was optimal to inhibit cell proliferation.

Pre-treatment of cells with 11-19µM of either flavonoid for 24 hours resulted in 59-73% growth inhibition when followed by Gem (10µM, 36h). Lut (15µM, 24h) Pre-treatment followed by Gem (10µM, 36h), significantly decreased protein expression of nuclear GSK-3βand NF-κB p65 and increased pro-apoptotic cytosolic cytochrome c. Pre-treatment of human pancreatic cancer cells BxPC-3 with low concentrations of Lut effectively aid in the anti-proliferative activity of chemotherapeutic drugs (Johnson et al., 2013).

Ovarian Cancer

Luteolin has been found to repress NF-kappaB (NF-κ>B, a pro-inflammatory transcription factor) and inhibit pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-αand IL-6. Additionally, it has been shown to stabilize p53 protein, sensitize TRAIL (TNF receptor apoptosis-inducing ligand) induced apoptosis, and prevent or delay chemotherapy-resistance.

Recent studies further indicate that luteolin potently inhibits VEGF production and suppresses ovarian cancer cell metastasis in vitro. Lastly, oridonin and wogonin were suggested to suppress ovarian CSCs as is reflected by down-regulation of the surface marker EpCAM. Unlike NSAIDS (non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs), well documented clinical data for phyto-active compounds are lacking. In order to evaluate objectively the potential benefit of these compounds in the treatment of ovarian cancer, strategically designed, large scale studies are warranted (Chen et al., 2012).

Chemo-sensitizer

The sensitization effect of luteolin on cisplatin-induced apoptosis is p53 dependent, as such effect is only found in p53 wild-type cancer cells but not in p53 mutant cancer cells. Moreover, knockdown of p53 by small interfering RNA made p53 wild-type cancer cells resistant to luteolin and cisplatin. Second, Shi et al., (2007) observed a significant increase of p53 protein level in luteolin-treated cancer cells without increase of p53 mRNA level, indicating the possible effect of luteolin on p53 posttranscriptional regulation.

In summary, data from this study reveal a novel molecular mechanism involved in the anti-cancer effect of luteolin and support its potential clinical application as a chemo-sensitizer in cancer therapy.

Breast Cancer; TAM Chemo-sensitizer

This study found that the level of cyclin E2 (CCNE2) mRNA was higher in tumor cells (4.89-fold, (∗)P=0.005) than in normal paired tissue samples as assessed using real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis (n=257). Further, relatively high levels of CCNE2 protein expression were detected in tamoxifen-resistant (TAM-R) MCF-7 cells.

These results showed that the level of CCNE2 protein expression was specifically inhibited in luteolin-treated (5µM) TAM-R cells, either in the presence or absence of 4-OH-TAM (100nM). Combined treatment with 4-OH-TAM and luteolin synergistically sensitized the TAM-R cells to 4-OH-TAM. The results of this study suggest that luteolin can be used as a chemo-sensitizer to target the expression level of CCNE2 and that it could be a novel strategy to overcome TAM resistance in breast cancer patients (Tu et al., 2013).

References

Baliga MS, Jimmy R, Thilakchand KR, et al. (2013). Ocimum sanctum L (Holy Basil or Tulsi) and its phytochemicals in the prevention and treatment of cancer. Nutr Cancer, 65(1):26-35. doi: 10.1080/01635581.2013.785010.


Chen CY, Peng WH, Tsai KD and Hsu SL. (2007). Luteolin suppresses inflammation-associated gene expression by blocking NF-κB and AP-1 activation pathway in mouse alveolar macrophages. Life Sciences, 81(23-24):1602-1614. doi:10.1016/j.lfs.2007.09.028


Chen MZ, Jin WZ, Dai LM, Xu SY. (1986). Effect of luteolin on inflammation and immune function. Chinese Journal of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1986-01.


Chen SS, Michael A, Butler-Manuel SA. (2012). Advances in the treatment of ovarian cancer: a potential role of anti-inflammatory phytochemicals. Discov Med, 13(68):7-17.


Jang S, Kelley KW, Johnson RW. (2008). Luteolin reduces IL-6 production in microglia by inhibiting JNK phosphorylation and activation of AP-1. PNAS, 105(21):7534-7539


Johnson JL, Gonzalez de Mejia E. (2013). Interactions between dietary flavonoids apigenin or luteolin and chemotherapeutic drugs to potentiate anti-proliferative effect on human pancreatic cancer cells, in vitro. Food Chem Toxicol, S0278-6915(13)00491-2. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2013.07.036.


Lim DY, Jeong Y, Tyner Al., Park JHY. (2007). Induction of cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in HT-29 human colon cancer cells by the dietary compound luteolin. Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol, 292: G66-G75. doi:10.1152/ajpgi.00248.2006.


Shi R, Huang Q, Zhu X, et al. (2007). Luteolin sensitizes the anti-cancer effect of cisplatin via c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase-mediated p53 phosphorylation and stabilization. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, 6(4):1338-1347. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-06-0638.


Tu SH, Ho CT, Liu MF, et al. (2013). Luteolin sensitizes drug-resistant human breast cancer cells to tamoxifen via the inhibition of cyclin E2 expression. Food Chem, 141(2):1553-61. doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.04.077.


Xagorari A, Papapetropoulos A, Mauromatis A, et al. (2001). Luteolin inhibits an endotoxin-stimulated phosphorylation cascade and pro-inflammatory cytokine production in macrophages. JPET, 296(1):181-187.

Astragalus (huang qi)

Cancer: Non-small-cell lung cancer, breast, colon, stomach

NSCLC; Chemotherapy

Guo et al. (2012) reported that treatment with Astragalus polysaccharide (APS) injections integrated with vinorelbine and cisplatin significantly improved quality of life in patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer over vinorelbine and cisplatin alone.

NSCLC

Astragalus injection (AI) combined with chemotherapy can significantly improve the QOF in NSCLC patients of advanced stage. The effective rate in the treated group was 40.0% and in the control group was 36.7%, the mean remission rate in the treated and control group was 5.4 months and 3.3 months, the median survival period 11 months and 7 months, and the 1-year survival rate 46.75% and 30.0%, respectively; the differences of these indexes between the two groups were all significant (P < 0.05). Moreover, the clinical improving rate and QOF elevation rate in the treated group was 80.4% and 43.3%, as compared with those in the control group (50.0% and 23.3% respectively); the difference was also significant (P < 0.01) (Zou & Liu, 2003).

Breast Cancer

In physiological dose E2, Astragalus mongholicus injection inhibited MCF-7 breast cancer cells proliferation at all concentration groups. As time lasting, Astragalus mongholicus injection showed better inhibitory effect than TAM (P<0.05). Among 2 x 10(-1) g/mL-2 x 10(-4) g/mL concentration, Astragalus mongholicus injection significantly increased the proliferative percent of G0/G1 and S-phase cell, decreased percent of G2-M phase cell (P<0.05) at 24 hours. After cocultured 72 hours, Astragalus mongholicus injection increased the rate of apoptosis to 16.7% at 2 x 10(-1) g/mL concentration (Zhou, Liu, & Tan, 2009).

Acute Exacerbations, Respiratory Failure in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

A total of 112 patients with acute chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD)were randomly divided into the treatment group (56 cases) and control group (56 cases). The treatment group received a 40 mL astragalus injection, with 5% glucose, 250 mL intravenous drip once a day at the start of conventional therapy. The control group received conventional therapy only. The therapeutic course of both groups was 14 days, and clinical therapeutic effects were observed. Serum levels of TNF-α>, IL-8, IL-2, lung function and blood gas analysis index of both groups were measured before and after treatment. The treatment group”s effectiveness rate was 94.64%, compared to the control group”s 67.86%, which was statistically significant (P<0.05).

Astragalus injection may significantly decrease the serum levels of TNF-α and IL-8, and increase the level of IL-2. It may improve the lung function and the curative effect in the patients with AECOPD (Xiong, Guo, & Xiong, 2013).

Residual Renal Function

The effect of astragalus injection on hemodialysis patient”s RRF (residual renal function, RRF) was observed.

Sixty hemodialysis patients with a RRF of more than 2ml/min were randomly divided into either an astragalus injection treatment group or a control group treated with normal saline. One hour prior to hemodialysis completion, the treatment group was administered an astragalus injection of 30ml, while the control group was given 30 ml of normal saline. Follow up after 6 months compared data of daily urine output and RRF.

Astragalus injection can potentially delay the rate of daily urine output reduction and protect RRF to some extent (Qi et al., 2013).

Stomach Cancer, Colon Cancer; Oxaliplatin-induced Neurotoxicity

40 patients with stomach or colon cancer were enrolled in the study. Patients comprised of 23 men and 17 women, from the ages of 32-75 years (mean age 60 years), and were randomly divided into two groups: the test group and the control group (20 cases in each group). All patients were treated with one cycle of an Oxaliplatin-containing chemotherapy regimen, entailing: oxaliplatin 130 mg/m2 on day 1, fluorouracil 0.5 g on days 1-5, and calcium foliate 0.2 g on days 1-5. In the test group 30 ml of Huangqi injection was added to the regimen on days 1-7. The manifestation of peripheral neurotoxic reactions were observed and nerve growth factor levels were measured.

In the control group, 2 patients had grade 0 toxicity, 10 had grade 1 toxicity, 6 had grade 2 toxicity, and 2 had grade 3 toxicity. In the test group, 14 patients had grade 0 toxicity and 6 had grade 1 toxicity. The incidence rate of neurotoxicity in the test and control groups was 30% and 90%, respectively. In the test and control groups, the nerve growth factor levels were (167 ± 10) ng/ml and (204 ± 19) ng/ml before chemotherapy, as well as (152 ± 8) ng/ml and (133 ± 12) ng/ml 2 days after chemotherapy, respectively. In the control group, the nerve growth factor levels were markedly decreased 2 days after chemotherapy compared to before chemotherapy. The difference between the two groups was statistically significant (P < 0.01).

Huangqi injection has some degree of efficacy in the prevention and treatment of Oxaliplatin-induced neurotoxicity (Cui, Li, Tan, & Li, 2009).

Myelosuppression

Astragalus membranaceus injection (AMI), administered at (500 mg/kg) improved the hematopoietic microenvironment by enhancing the BMSC survival and proliferation of colony-forming unit-fibroblast (CFU-F) formation, production of IL-6 as well as Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) by BMSC and bcl-2 protein and mRNA expression in BMSC, which promoted myelopoiesis. The data may provide a mechanistic basis for applying this ancient Chinese herb to promote hematopoiesis as an efficacious adjuvant therapy against myelosuppression induced by anti-cancer therapy (Zhu & Zhu, 2007).

References

Cui, H.J., Li, O.J., Ying, H.Y., & Li, Y. (2009). Clinical observation of efficacy of huangqi injection in the prevention and treatment of neurotoxicity induced by oxaliplatin-containing chemotherapy regimen. Adverse Drug Reactions Journal., 11(4), 1671-8585.


Guo, L., Bai, S.P., Zhao, L., Wang, X.H. (2012). Astragalus polysaccharide injection integrated with vinorelbine and cisplatin for patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: effects on quality of life and survival. Med Oncol. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12032-011-0068-9.


Qi, Y.H., Qu, X.L., Tang, Y.H., Dai, Q., Zhang, S.B., & Yao, C.Y. (2013). The impact of Astragalus injection on residual renal function in hemodialysis patients. New Medicine, 2013(2), 105-107.


Xiong, S., Guo, Y., & Xiong, X. (2013). Influence of astragalus injection on serum cytokines and lung function in acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. China Modern Doctor, 51(9), 43-45.


Zhou, R.F., Liu, P.X., Tan, M. (2009). Effect of Astragalus mongholicus injection on proliferation and apoptosis of hormone sensitive (MCF-7) breast cancer cell lines with physiological dose E2. Zhong Yao Cai, 32(5):744-7.


Zou, Y.H., Liu, X.M. (2003). Effect of astragalus injection combined with chemotherapy on quality of life in patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. Zhongguo Zhong Xi Yi Jie He Za Zhi, 23(10):733–735.


Zhu XL, Zhu BD. (2007). Mechanisms by which Astragalus membranaceus injection regulates hematopoiesis in myelosuppressed mice. Phytother Res, 21(7):663-7.

Baicalin & Baicalein

Cancer:
Myeloma, liver, colorectal., breast, prostate, oral., hepatoma, ovarian

Action: Anti-cancer, cardiovascular disease, cytostatic, cardio-protective against Doxorubicin, anti-inflammatory, angiogenesis

Baicalin and baicalein are naturally occurring flavonoids that are found in the roots and leaves of some Chinese medicinal plants (including Scutellaria radix, Scutellaria rivularis (Benth.); Scutellaria baicalensis (Georgi) and Scutellaria lateriflora (L.)) are thought to have anti-oxidant activity and possible anti-angiogenic, anti-cancer, anxiolytic, anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective activities. In particular, Scutellaria baicalensis is one of the most popular and multi-purpose herbs used in China traditionally for treatment of inflammation, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, and bacterial and viral infections (Ye et al., 2002; Zhang et al., 2011a).

Anti-cancer

Accumulating evidence demonstrates that Scutellaria also possesses potent anti-cancer activities. The bioactive components of Scutellaria have been confirmed to be flavones, wogonin, baicalein and baicalin. These phytochemicals are not only cytostatic but also cytotoxic to various human tumor cell lines in vitro and inhibit tumor growth in vivo. Most importantly, they show almost no or minor toxicity to normal epithelial and normal peripheral blood and myeloid cells. The anti-tumor functions of these flavones are largely due to their abilities to scavenge oxidative radicals, to attenuate NF-kappaB activity, to inhibit several genes important for regulation of the cell-cycle, to suppress COX-2 gene expression and to prevent viral infections (Li, 2008).

Multiple Myeloma

In the search for a more effective adjuvant therapy to treat multiple myeloma (MM), Ma et al. (2005) investigated the effects of the traditional Chinese herbal medicines Huang-Lian-Jie-Du-Tang (HLJDT), Gui-Zhi-Fu-Ling-Wan (GZFLW), and Huang-Lian-Tang (HLT) on the proliferation and apoptosis of myeloma cells. HLJDT inhibited the proliferation of myeloma cell lines and the survival of primary myeloma cells, especially MPC-1- immature myeloma cells, and induced apoptosis in myeloma cell lines via a mitochondria-mediated pathway by reducing mitochondrial membrane potential and activating caspase-9 and caspase-3.

Further experiments confirmed that Scutellaria radix was responsible for the suppressive effect of HLJDT on myeloma cell proliferation, and the baicalein in Scutellaria radix showed strong growth inhibition and induction of apoptosis in comparison with baicalin or wogonin. Baicalein as well as baicalin suppressed the survival in vitro of MPC-1- immature myeloma cells rather than MPC-1+ myeloma cells from myeloma patients.

Baicalein inhibited the phosphorylation of IkB-alpha, which was followed by decreased expression of the IL-6 and XIAP genes and activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3. Therefore, HLJDT and Scutellaria radix have an anti-proliferative effect on myeloma cells, especially MPC-1- immature myeloma cells, and baicalein may be responsible for the suppressive effect of Scutellaria radix by blocking IkB-alpha degradation (Ma, 2005).

Hepatoma

The effects of the flavonoids from Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi (baicalein, baicalin and wogonin) in cultured human hepatoma cells (Hep G2, Hep 3B and SK-Hep1) were compared by MTT assay and flow cytometry. All three flavonoids dose-dependently decreased the cell viabilities accompanying the collapse of mitochondrial membrane potential and the depletion of glutathione content. However, the influence of baicalein, baicalin or wogonin on cell-cycle progression was different.

All three flavonoids resulted in prominent increase of G2/M population in Hep G2 cells, whereas an accumulation of sub G1 (hypoploid) peak in Hep 3B cells was observed. In SK-Hep1 cells, baicalein and baicalin resulted in a dramatic boost in hypoploid peak, but wogonin mainly in G1 phase accumulation. These data, together with the previous findings in other hepatoma cell lines, suggest that baicalein, baicalin and wogonin might be effective candidates for inducing apoptosis or inhibiting proliferation in various human hepatoma cell lines (Chang, 2002).

Long dan xie gan tang (pinyin) is one of the most commonly used herbal formulas by patients with chronic liver disease in China. Accumulated anecdotal evidence suggests that Long dan tang may have beneficial effects in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. Long dan tang is comprised of five herbs: Gentiana root, Scutellaria root, Gardenia fruit, Alisma rhizome, and Bupleurum root. The cytotoxic effects of compounds from the five major ingredients isolated from the above plants, i.e. gentiopicroside, baicalein, geniposide, alisol B acetate and saikosaponin-d, were investigated, respectively, on human hepatoma Hep3B cells..

Interestingly, baicalein by itself induced an increase in H(2)O(2) generation and the subsequent NF-kappaB activation; furthermore, it effectively inhibited the transforming growth factor-beta(1) (TGF-beta(1))-induced caspase-3 activation and cell apoptosis. Results suggest that alisol B acetate and saikosaponin-d induced cell apoptosis through the caspase-3-dependent and -independent pathways, respectively. Instead of inducing apoptosis, baicalein inhibits TGF-beta(1)-induced apoptosis via increase in cellular H(2)O(2) formation and NF-kappaB activation in human hepatoma Hep3B cells (Chou, Pan, Teng & Guh, 2003).

Ovarian Cancer

Ovarian cancer is one of the primary causes of death for women all through the Western world. Two kinds of ovarian cancer (OVCAR-3 and CP-70) cell lines and a normal ovarian cell line (IOSE-364) were selected to be investigated in the inhibitory effect of baicalin and baicalein on cancer cells. Largely, baicalin and baicalein inhibited ovarian cancer cell viability in both ovarian cancer cell lines with LD50 values in the range of 45-55 µM for baicalin and 25-40 µM for baicalein. On the other hand, both compounds had fewer inhibitory effects on normal ovarian cells viability with LD50 values of 177 µM for baicalin and 68 µM for baicalein.

Baicalin decreased expression of VEGF (20 µM), cMyc (80 µM), and NFkB (20 µM); baicalein decreased expression of VEGF (10 µM), HIF-1α (20 µM), cMyc (20 µM), and NFkB (40 µM). Therefore baicalein is more effective in inhibiting cancer cell viability and expression of VEGF, HIF-1α, cMyc, and NFκB in both ovarian cancer cell lines. It seems that baicalein inhibited cancer cell viability through the inhibition of cancer promoting genes expression including VEGF, HIF-1α, cMyc, and NFκB.

Overall, this study showed that baicalein and baicalin significantly inhibited the viability of ovarian cancer cells, while generally exerting less of an effect on normal cells. They have potential for chemoprevention and treatment of ovarian cancers (Chen, 2013).

Breast Cancer

Baicalin was found to be a potent inhibitor of mammary cell line MCF-7 and ductal breast epithelial tumor cell line T-47D proliferation, as well as having anti-proliferative effects on other cancer types such as the human head and neck cancer epithelial cell lines CAL-27 and FaDu. Overall, baicalin inhibited the proliferation of human breast cancer cells and CAL-27 and FaDu cells with effective potency (Franek, 2005).

Breast Cancer, Cell Invasion

The effect of Baicalein on cell viability of the human breast cancer MDA-MB-231 cell line was tested by MTT. 50, 100 µmol·L-1 of Baicalein inhibited significantly cell invasion(P0.01) and migration(P0.01) compared with control groups. The inhibitory rates were 50% and 77% in cell migration and 15% and 44% in cell invasion, respectively. 50 µmol·L-1 of Baicalein significantly inhibited the level of MMP 2 expression. 100 µmol·L-1 of Baicalein significantly inhibited the level of MMP 9 and uPA expressions.

Baicalein inhibits invasion and migration of MDA-MB-231 cells. The mechanisms may be involved in the direct inhibition of cell invasion and migration abilities, and the inhibition of MMP 2, MMP 9, and uPA expressions (Wang et al., 2010).

The proliferation of MDA-MB-231 cell line human breast adenocarcinoma was inhibited by baicalin in a dose-and time-dependent manner and the IC50 was 151 µmol/L. The apoptotic rate of the baicalin-treated MDA-MB-231 cells increased significantly at 48 hours. Flow cytometer analysis also revealed that most of the baicalin-treated MDA-MB-231 cells were arrested in the G2/M phase. Typically apoptotic characteristics such as condensed chromatin and apoptotic bodies were observed after being treated with baicalin for 48 hours.

The results of RT-PCR showed that the expression of bax was up-regulated; meanwhile, the expression of bcl-2 was down-regulated. Baicalin could inhibit the proliferation of MDA-MB-231 cells through apoptosis by regulating the expression of bcl-2, bax and intervening in the process of the cell-cycle (Zhu et al., 2008).

Oral Cancer

As an aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) ligand, baicalein at high concentrations blocks AhR-mediated dioxin toxicity. Because AhR had been reported to play a role in regulating the cell-cycle, it is suspected that the anti-cancer effect of baicalein is associated with AhR. The molecular mechanism involved in the anti-cancer effect of baicalein in oral cancer cells HSC-3 has been investigated, including whether such an effect would be AhR-mediated. Results revealed that baicalein inhibited cell proliferation and increased AhR activity in a dose-dependent manner. Cell-cycle was arrested at the G1 phase and the expression of CDK4, cyclin D1, and phosphorylated retinoblastoma (pRb) was decreased.

When cells were pre-treated with LiCl, the inhibitor of GSK-3β, the decrease of cyclin D1 was blocked and the reduction of pRb was recovered. The data indicates that in HSC-3 the reduction of pRb is mediated by baicalein both through activation of AhR and facilitation of cyclin D1 degradation, which causes cell-cycle arrest at the G1 phase, and results in the inhibition of cell proliferation (Cheng, 2012).

Anti-inflammatory

Baicalin has also been examined for its effects on LPS-induced nitric oxide (NO) production and iNOS and COX-2 gene expressions in RAW 264.7 macrophages. The results indicated that baicalin inhibited LPS-induced NO production in a concentration-dependent manner without a notable cytotoxic effect on these cells. The decrease in NO production was consistent with the inhibition by baicalin of LPS-induced iNOS gene expression (Chen, 2001)

Angiogenesis Modulation

The modulation of angiogenesis is one possible mechanism by which baicalin may act in the treatment of cardiovascular diseases. This may be elucidated by investigating the effects of baicalin on the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a critical factor for angiogenesis. The effects of baicalin and an extract of S. baicalensis on VEGF expression were tested in several cell lines. Both agents induced VEGF expression in all cells without increasing expression of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha).

Their ability to induce VEGF expression was suppressed once ERRalpha expression was knocked down by siRNA, or ERRalpha-binding sites were deleted in the VEGF promoter. It was also found that both agents stimulated cell migration and vessel sprout formation from the aorta. These results therefore implicate baicalin and S. baicalensis in angiogenesis by inducing VEGF expression through the activation of the ERRalpha pathway (Zhang, 2011b).

Colon Cancer

The compounds of baicalein and wogonin, derived from the Chinese herb Scutellaria baicalensis, were studied for their effect in suppressing the viability of HT-29 human colon cancer cells. Following treatment with baicalein or wogonin, several apoptotic events were observed, including DNA fragmentation, chromatin condensation and increased cell-cycle arrest at the G1 phase. Baicalein and wogonin decreased Bcl-2 expression, whereas the expression of Bax was increased in a dose-dependent manner when compared to the control.

The results indicated that baicalein induced apoptosis via Akt activation, in a p53-dependent manner, in HT-29 colon cancer cells. Baicalein may serve as a chemo-preventive, or therapeutic, agent for HT-29 colon cancer (Kim et al., 2012).

Cardio-protective

The cardiotoxicity of doxorubicin limits its clinical use in the treatment of a variety of malignancies. Previous studies suggest that doxorubicin-associated cardiotoxicity is mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced apoptosis. Baicalein attenuated phosphorylation of JNK induced by doxorubicin. Co-treatment of cardiomyocytes with doxorubicin and JNK inhibitor SP600125 (10 µM; 24 hours) reduced JNK phosphorylation and enhanced cell survival., suggesting that the baicalein protection against doxorubicin cardiotoxicity was mediated by JNK activation. Baicalein adjunct treatment confers anti-apoptotic protection against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity without compromising its anti-cancer efficacy (Chang et al., 2011).

Prostate Cancer

There are four compounds capable of inhibiting prostate cancer cell proliferation in Scutellaria baicalensis: baicalein, wogonin, neobaicalein, and skullcapflavone. Comparisons of the cellular effects induced by the entire extract versus the four-compound combination produced comparable cell-cycle changes, levels of growth inhibition, and global gene expression profiles (r(2) = 0.79). Individual compounds exhibited anti-androgenic activities with reduced expression of the androgen receptor and androgen-regulated genes. In vivo, baicalein (20 mg/kg/d p.o.) reduced the growth of prostate cancer xenografts in nude mice by 55% at 2 weeks compared with placebo and delayed the average time for tumors to achieve a volume of approximately 1,000 mm(3) from 16 to 47 days (P < 0.001).

Most of the anti-cancer activities of S. baicalensis can be recapitulated with four purified constituents that function in part through inhibition of the androgen receptor signaling pathway (Bonham et al., 2005)

Cancer: Acute lymphocytic leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma

Action: Cell-cycle arrest, induces apoptosis

Scutellaria baicalensis (S.B.) is a widely used Chinese herbal medicine. S.B inhibited the growth of acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), lymphoma and myeloma cell lines by inducing apoptosis and cell cycle arrest at clinically achievable concentrations. The anti-proliferative effectwas associated with mitochondrial damage, modulation of the Bcl family of genes, increased level of the CDK inhibitor p27KIP1 and decreased level of c-myc oncogene. HPLC analysis of S.B. showed it contains 21% baicalin and further studies confirmed it was the major anti-cancer component of S.B. Thus, Scutellaria baicalensis should be tested in clinical trials for these hematopoietic malignancies (Kumagai et al., 2007).

References

Bonham M, Posakony J, Coleman I, Montgomery B, Simon J, Nelson PS. (2005). Characterization of chemical constituents in Scutellaria baicalensis with antiandrogenic and growth-inhibitory activities toward prostate carcinoma. Clin Cancer Res, 11(10):3905-14.


Chang WH Chen CH Lu FJ. (2002). Different Effects of Baicalein, Baicalin and Wogonin on Mitochondrial Function, Glutathione Content and cell-cycle Progression in Human Hepatoma Cell Lines. Planta Med, 68(2):128-32. doi: 10.1055/s-2002-20246


Chang WT, Li J, Huang HH, et al. (2011). Baicalein protects against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity by attenuation of mitochondrial oxidant injury .and JNK activation. J Cell Biochem. doi: 10.1002/jcb.23201.


Chen J, Li Z, Chen AY, Ye X, et al. (2013). Inhibitory effect of baicalin and baicalein on ovarian cancer cells. Int J Mol Sci, 14(3):6012-25. doi: 10.3390/ijms14036012.


Chen YC, Shen SC, Chen LG, Lee TJ, Yang LL. (2001). Wogonin, baicalin, and baicalein inhibition of inducible nitric oxide synthase and cyclooxygenase-2 gene expressions induced by nitric oxide synthase inhibitors and lipopolysaccharide. Biochem Pharmacol,61(11):1417-27. doi:10.1016/S0006-2952(01)00594-9


Cheng YH, Li LA, Lin P, et al. (2012). Baicalein induces G1 arrest in oral cancer cells by enhancing the degradation of cyclin D1 and activating AhR to decrease Rb phosphorylation. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol, 263(3):360-7. doi: 10.1016/j.taap.2012.07.010.


Chou CC, Pan SL, Teng CM, & Guh JH. (2003). Pharmacological evaluation of several major ingredients of Chinese herbal medicines in human hepatoma Hep3B cells. European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 19(5), 403-12.


Franek KJ, Zhou Z, Zhang WD, Chen WY. (2005). In vitro studies of baicalin alone or in combination with Salvia miltiorrhiza extract as a potential anti-cancer agent. Int J Oncol, 26(1):217-24.


Kim SJ, Kim HJ, Kim HR, et al. (2012). Anti-tumor actions of baicalein and wogonin in HT-29 human colorectal cancer cells. Molecular Medicine Reports, 6(6):1443-1449. doi: 10.3892/mmr.2012.1085.


Li-Weber M. (2009). New therapeutic aspects of flavones: The anti-cancer properties of Scutellaria and its main active constituents Wogonin, Baicalein and Baicalin. Cancer Treat Rev, 35(1):57-68. doi: 10.1016/j.ctrv.2008.09.005.


Ma Z, Otsuyama K, Liu S, et al. (2005). Baicalein, a component of Scutellaria radix from Huang-Lian-Jie-Du-Tang (HLJDT), leads to suppression of proliferation and induction of apoptosis in human myeloma cells. Blood, 105(8):3312-8. doi:10.1182/blood-2004-10-3915.


Wang Xf, Zhou Qm, Su Sb. (2010). Experimental study on Baicalein inhibiting the invasion and migration of human breast cancer cells. Zhong Guo Yao Li Xue Tong Bao, 26(6): 745-750.


Zhang XW, Li WF, Li WW, et al. (2011a). Protective effects of the aqueous extract of Scutellaria baicalensis against acrolein-induced oxidative stress in cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Pharm Biol, 49(3): 256–261. doi:10.3109/13880209.2010.501803.


Ye F, Xui L, Yi J, Zhang, W, Zhang DY. (2002). Anti-cancer activity of Scutellaria baicalensis and its potential mechanism. J Altern Complement Med, 8(5):567-72.


Zhang K, Lu J, Mori T, et al. (2011b). Baicalin increases VEGF expression and angiogenesis by activating the ERR{alpha}/PGC-1{alpha} pathway.[J]. Cardiovascular Research, 89(2):426-435.


Zhu Gq, Tang Lj, Wang L, Su Jj, et al. (2008). Study on Baicalin Induced Apoptosis of Human Breast Cancer Cell Line MDA-MB-231. An Hui Zhong Yi Xue Yuan Xue Bao, 27(2):20-23

Kumagai T, et al. (2007) Scutellaria baicalensis, a herbal medicine: Anti-proliferative and apoptotic activity against acute lymphocytic leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma cell lines. Leukemia Research 31 (2007) 523-530

Tanshinone II A & Tanshinone A (See also Cryptotanshinone)

Cancer:
Leukemia, prostate, breast, gastric, colorectal, nasopharyngeal carcinoma

Action: Chemo-sensitizer, cytostatic, cancer stem cells, anti-cancer, autophagic cell death, cell-cycle arrest

Anti-cancer

Tanshinone IIA and cryptotanshinone could induce CYP3A4 activity (Qiu et al., 2103).

Tanshinone II-A (Tan IIA) is the most abundant diterpene quinone isolated from Danshen (Salvia miltiorrhiza), which has been used in treating cardiovascular diseases for more than 2,000 years in China. Interest in its versatile protective effects in cardiovascular, metabolic, neurodegenerative diseases, and cancers has been growing over the last decade.

Tan IIA is a multi-target drug, whose molecular targets include transcription factors, scavenger receptors, ion channels, kinases, pro- and anti-apoptotic proteins, growth factors, inflammatory mediators, microRNA, and others. More recently, enhanced or synergistic effects can be observed when Tan IIA is used in combination therapy with cardio-protective and anti-cancer drugs (Xu & Liu, 2013).

Leukemia

The in vitro anti-proliferation and apoptosis-inducing effects of Tanshinone IIA on leukemia THP-1 cell lines and its mechanisms of action were investigated. MTT assay was used to detect the cell growth-inhibitory rate; cell apoptotic rate and the mitochondrial membrane potential (Deltapsim) were investigated by flow cytometry (FCM); apoptotic morphology was observed by Hoechst 33258 staining and DNA fragmentation analysis.

It was therefore concluded that Tanshinone IIA has significant growth inhibition effects on THP-1 cells by induction of apoptosis, and that Tanshinone IIA-induced apoptosis on THP-1 cells is mainly related to the disruption of Deltapsim and activation of caspase-3 as well as down-regulation of anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2, survivin and up-regulation of pro-apoptotic protein Bax. The results indicate that Tanshinone IIA may serve as a potential anti-leukemia agent (Liu et al., 2009).

Prostate Cancer

Chiu et al. (2013) explored the mechanisms of cell death induced by Tan-IIA treatment in prostate cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Results showed that Tan-IIA caused prostate cancer cell death in a dose-dependent manner, and cell-cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase was noted, in LNCaP cells. The G0/G1 phase arrest correlated with increased levels of CDK inhibitors (p16, p21 and p27) and decrease of the checkpoint proteins. Tan-IIA also induced ER stress in prostate cancer cells: activation and nuclear translocation of GADD153/CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein-homologous protein (CHOP) were identified, and increased expression of the downstream molecules GRP78/BiP, inositol-requiring protein-1α and GADD153/CHOP were evidenced. Blockage of GADD153/CHOP expression by siRNA reduced Tan-IIA-induced cell death in LNCaP cells.

Gastric Cancer

Tan IIA can reverse the malignant phenotype of SGC7901 gastric cancer cells, indicating that it may be a promising therapeutic agent.

Tan IIA (1, 5, 10 µg/ml) exerted powerful inhibitory effects on cell proliferation (P < 0.05, and P < 0.01), and this effect was time- and dose-dependent. FCM results showed that Tan IIA induced apoptosis of SGC7901 cells, reduced the number of cells in S phase and increased those in G0/G1 phase. Tan IIA also significantly increased the sensitivity of SGC7901 gastric cancer cells to ADR and Fu. Moreover, wound-healing and transwell assays showed that Tan IIA markedly decreased migratory and invasive abilities of SGC7901 cells (Xu et al., 2013).

Cell-cycle Arrest

MTT and SRB assays were applied to measure the effects of tanshinone A on cell viability. Cell-cycle distribution and apoptosis were assessed via flow cytometry using PI staining and the Annexin V/PI double staining method respectively. Changes to mitochondrial membrane potential was also detected by flow cytometry. The spectrophotometric method was utilized to detect changes of caspase-3 activity. Western blotting assay was used to evaluate the expression of Bcl-2, Bax and c-Myc proteins.

Results indicated that Tan-IIA displayed significant inhibitory effect on the growth of K562 cells in a dose- and time- dependent manner, and displayed only minimal damage to hepatic LO2 cells.

Tan-IIA could arrest K562 cells in the G0/G1 phase and induce apoptosis, decrease mitochondrial transmembrane potential, and the expressions of Bcl-2 and c-Myc proteins, increase the expression of Bax protein and activity of caspase-3. Accordingly, it was presumed that the induction of apoptosis may be through the endogenous pathway. Subsequently, tanshinone A could be a promising candidate in the development of a novel anti-tumor agent (Zhen et al., 2011).

Prostate Cancer, Chemo-sensitizer

Treatment with a combination of Chinese herbs and cytotoxic chemotherapies has shown a higher survival rate in clinical trials.

Tan-IIA displayed synergistic anti-tumor effects on human prostate cancer PC3 cells and LNCaP cells, when combined with cisplatin in vitro. Anti-proliferative effects were detected via MTT assay. Cell-cycle distribution and apoptosis were detected by flow cytometer. Protein expression was detected by Western blotting. The intracellular concentration of cisplatin was detected by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC).

Results demonstrated that tanshinone II A significantly enhanced the anti-proliferative effects of cisplatin on human prostate cancer PC3 cells and LNCaP cells with an increase in the intracellular concentration of cisplatin. These effects were correlated with cell-cycle arrest at the S phase and induction of cell apoptosis. Apoptosis could potentially be achieved through the death receptor and mitochondrial pathways, decreased expression of Bcl-2.

Collectively, results indicated that the combination of tanshinone II A and cisplatin had a better treatment effect, in vitro, not only on androgen-dependent LNCaP cells but also on androgen-independent PC3 cells (Hou, Xu, Hu, & Xie, 2013).

Autophagic Cell Death, CSCs

Tan IIA significantly increased the expression of microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 (LC3) II as a hallmark of autophagy in Western blotting and immunofluorescence staining. Tan IIA augmented the phosphorylation of adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and attenuated the phosphorylation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and p70 S6K in a dose-dependent manner.Tan IIA dramatically activated the extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) signaling pathway including Raf, ERK and p90 RSK in a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner. Consistently, ERK inhibitor PD184352 suppressed LC3-II activation induced by Tan IIA, whereas PD184352 and PD98059 did not affect poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and sub-G1 accumulation induced by Tan IIA in KBM-5 leukemia cells.

Tan IIA induces autophagic cell death via activation of AMPK and ERK and inhibition of mTOR and p70 S6K in KBM-5 cells as a potent natural compound for leukemia treatment (Yun et al., 2013).

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are maintained by inflammatory cytokines and signaling pathways. Tanshinone IIA (Tan-IIA) possesses anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory activities. The purpose of this study is to confirm the growth inhibition effect of Tan-IIA on human breast CSCs growth in vitro and in vivo and to explore the possible mechanism of its activity. After Tan-IIA treatment, cell proliferation and mammosphere formation of CSCs were decreased significantly; the expression levels of IL-6, STAT3, phospho-STAT3 (Tyr705), NF-κBp65 in nucleus and cyclin D1 proteins were decreased significantly; the tumor growth and mean tumor weight were reduced significantly.

Tan-IIA has the potential to target and kill CSCs, and can inhibit human breast CSCs growth both in vitro and in vivo through attenuation of IL-6/STAT3/NF-kB signaling pathways (Lin et al., 2013).

Colorectal Cancer

Tan II-A can effectively inhibit tumor growth and angiogenesis of human colorectal cancer via inhibiting the expression level of COX-2 and VEGF. Angiogenesis plays a significant role in colorectal cancer (CRC) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) appears to be involved with multiple aspects of CRC angiogenesis (Zhou et al., 2012). The results showed that Tan IIA inhibited the proliferation of inflammation-related colon cancer cells HCT116 and HT-29 by decreasing the production of inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and interleukin 6 (IL-6), which are generated by macrophage RAW264.7 cell line.

Treatment with TanshinoneIIA prevented increased PU.1, a transcriptional activator of miR-155, and hence increased miR-155, whereas aspirin could not. These findings support that the interruption of signal conduction between activated macrophages and colon cancer cells could be considered as a new therapeutic strategy and miR-155 could be a potential target for the prevention of inflammation-related cancer (Tu et al., 2012).

Breast Cancer

The proliferation rate of T47D and MDA-MB-231 cells influenced by 1×10-6 mol·L-1 and 1×10-7 mol·L-1 Tanshinone IIA was analyzed by MTT assay. Estrogen receptor antagonist ICI182, 780 was employed as a tool. Level of ERα and ERβ mRNA in T47D cells was quantified by Real-time RT-PCR assay. Expression of ERα and ERβ protein was measured by flow cytometry. The proliferation rates of T47D cells treated with Tanshinone IIA decreased significantly. Such effects could be partly blocked by ICI182, 780.

Meanwhile, the proliferation rates of MDA-MB-231 cells treated with Tanshinone IIA decreased much more dramatically. Real-time RT-PCR and flow cytometry results showed that Tanshinone IIA could induce elevation of ERα and ERβ, especially ERα mRNA, and protein expression level in T47D cells. Tanshinone IIA shows inhibitory effects on proliferation of breast cancer cell lines (Zhao et al., 2010).

The role of cell adhesion molecules in the process of inflammation has been studied extensively, and these molecules are critical components of carcinogenesis and cancer metastasis. This study investigated the effect of tanshinone I on cancer growth, invasion and angiogenesis on human breast cancer cells MDA-MB-231, both in vitro and in vivo. Tanshinone I dose-dependently inhibited ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 expressions in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) that were stimulated with TNF-α for 6 h.

Additionally, reduction of tumor mass volume and decrease of metastasis incidents by tanshinone I were observed in vivo. In conclusion, this study provides a potential mechanism for the anti-cancer effect of tanshinone I on breast cancer cells, suggesting that tanshinone I may serve as an effective drug for the treatment of breast cancer (Nizamutdinova et al., 2008).

Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma

To investigate anti-cancer effect and potential mechanism of tanshinone II(A) (Tan II(A)) on human nasopharyngeal carcinoma cell line CNE cells, the anti-proliferative effect of Tan II(A) on CNE cells was evaluated by morphological examination, cell growth curves, colonial assay and MTT assay. Tan II(A) could inhibit CNE cell proliferation in dose- and time-dependent manner. After treatment with Tan II(A), intracellular Ca2+ concentration of CNE cells was increased, mitochondria membrane potential of the cells was decreased, relative mRNA level of Bad and MT-1A was up-regulated. Tan II(A) had an anti-cancer effect on CNE cells through apoptosis via a calcineurin-dependent pathway and MT-1A down-regulation, and may be the next generation of chemotherapy (Dai et al., 2011).

References

Chiu SC, Huang SY, Chen SP, et al. (2013). Tanshinone IIA inhibits human prostate cancer cells growth by induction of endoplasmic reticulum stress in vitro and in vivo. Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis. doi: 10.1038/pcan.2013.38.


Dai Z, Huang D, Shi J, Yu L, Wu Q, Xu Q. (2011). Apoptosis inducing effect of tanshinone II(A) on human nasopharyngeal carcinoma CNE cells. Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi, 36(15):2129-33.


Hou LL, Xu QJ, Hu GQ, Xie SQ. (2013). Synergistic anti-tumor effects of tanshinone II A in combination with cisplatin via apoptosis in the prostate cancer cells. Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica, 48(5), 675-679.


Lin C, Wang L, Wang H, et al. (2013). Tanshinone IIA inhibits breast cancer stem cells growth in vitro and in vivo through attenuation of IL-6/STAT3/NF-kB signaling pathways. J Cell Biochem, 114(9):2061-70. doi: 10.1002/jcb.24553.


Liu JJ, Zhang Y, Lin DJ, Xiao RZ. (2009). Tanshinone IIA inhibits leukemia THP-1 cell growth by induction of apoptosis. Oncol Rep, 21(4):1075-81.


Nizamutdinova IT, Lee GW, Lee JS, et al. (2008). Tanshinone I suppresses growth and invasion of human breast cancer cells, MDA-MB-231, through regulation of adhesion molecules. Carcinogenesis, 29(10):1885-1892. doi:10.1093/carcin/bgn151


Qiu F, Jiang J, Ma Ym, et al. (2013). Opposite Effects of Single-Dose and Multidose Administration of the Ethanol Extract of Danshen on CYP3A in Healthy Volunteers. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2013(2013) http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/730734


Tu J, Xing Y, Guo Y, et al. (2012). TanshinoneIIA ameliorates inflammatory microenvironment of colon cancer cells via repression of microRNA-155. Int Immunopharmacol, 14(4):353-61. doi: 10.1016/j.intimp.2012.08.015.


Xu M, Cao FL, Li NY, et al. (2013). Tanshinone IIA reverses the malignant phenotype of SGC7901 gastric cancer cells. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev, 14(1):173-7.


Xu S, Liu P. (2013). Tanshinone II-A: new perspectives for old remedies. Expert Opin Ther Pat, 23(2):149-53. doi: 10.1517/13543776.2013.743995.


Yun SM, Jung JH, Jeong SJ, et al. (2013). Tanshinone IIA Induces Autophagic Cell Death via Activation of AMPK and ERK and Inhibition of mTOR and p70 S6K in KBM-5 Leukemia Cells. Phytother Res. doi: 10.1002/ptr.5015.


Zhen X, Cen J, Li YM, Yan F, Guan T, Tang, XZ. (2011). Cytotoxic effect and apoptotic mechanism of tanshinone A, a novel tanshinone derivative, on human erythroleukemic K562 cells. European Journal of Pharmacology, 667(1-3), 129-135. doi: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2011.06.004.


Zhao PW, Niu JZ, Wang JF, Hao QX, Yu J, et al. (2010). Research on the inhibitory effect of Tanshinone IIA on breast cancer cell proliferation. Zhong Guo Yao Li Xue Tong Bao, 26(7):903-906.


Zhou LH, Hu Q, Sui H, et al. (2012). Tanshinone II–a inhibits angiogenesis through down regulation of COX-2 in human colorectal cancer. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev, 13(9):4453-8.

Luteolin

Cancer: Colorectal., ovarian, pancreatic

Action: Anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, radio-sensitizer, chemo-sensitizer

Luteolin is a flavonoid found in many plants and foods, including Terminalia chebula (Retz.), Prunella vulgaris (L.) and Perilla frutescens [(L.) Britton].

Luteolin is contained in Ocimum sanctum L . or Ocimum tenuiflorum L , commonly known as Holy Basil in English or Tulsi in various Indian languages, which is an important medicinal plant in the various traditional and folk systems of medicine in Southeast Asia. Scientific studies have shown it to possess anti-inflammatory, analgesic, anti-pyretic, anti-diabetic, hepato-protective, hypolipidemic, anti-stress, and immunomodulatory activities. It has been found to prevent chemical-induced skin, liver, oral., and lung cancers and mediates these effects by increasing the anti-oxidant activity, altering the gene expressions, inducing apoptosis, and inhibiting angiogenesis and metastasis.

Colon Cancer

Luteolin inhibited cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)4 and CDK2 activity, resulting in G1 arrest with a concomitant decrease of phosphorylation of retinoblastoma protein. Activities of CDK4 and CDK2 decreased within 2 hours after luteolin treatment, with a 38% decrease in CDK2 activity (P < 0.05) observed in cells treated with 40 µmol/l luteolin. Luteolin also promoted G2/M arrest at 24 hours post-treatment by down-regulating cyclin B1 expression and inhibiting cell division cycle (CDC)2 activity. Luteolin promoted apoptosis with increased activation of caspases 3, 7, and 9 and enhanced poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and decreased expression of p21CIP1/WAF1, survivin, Mcl-1, Bcl-xL, and Mdm-2. Lim et al. (2007) demonstrated that luteolin promotes both cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in the HT-29 colon cancer cell line, providing insight about the mechanisms underlying its anti-tumorigenic activities.

Radio-protective

The aqueous extract of Perilla frutescens has been shown to protect mice against γ-radiation-induced sickness and mortality and to selectively protect the normal tissues against the tumoricidal effects of radiation. The chemo-preventive and radio-protective properties of Perilla emphasize aspects that warrant future research to establish its activity and utility in cancer prevention and treatment (Baliga et al., 2013).

Anti-inflammatory

Pre-treatment of RAW 264.7 macrophages with luteolin, luteolin-7-glucoside, quercetin, and the isoflavonoid genistein inhibited both the LPS-stimulated TNF-α and interleukin-6 release, whereas eriodictyol and hesperetin only inhibited TNF-α release. From the compounds tested, luteolin and quercetin were the most potent in inhibiting cytokine production with an IC50 of less than 1 and 5 µM for TNF-α release, respectively. Moreover, luteolin inhibited LPS-induced phosphorylation of Akt. Treatment of macrophages with LPS resulted in increased IκB-α phosphorylation and reduced the levels of IκB-α. Pre-treatment of cells with luteolin abolished the effects of LPS on IκB-α.

Xagorari et al. (2001) concluded that luteolin inhibits protein tyrosine phosphorylation, nuclear factor-κB-mediated gene expression and pro-inflammatory cytokine production in murine macrophages.

Anti-inflammatory; Neuroinflammation

Pre-treatment of primary murine microglia and BV-2 microglial cells with luteolin inhibited LPS-stimulated IL-6 production at both the mRNA and protein levels. Whereas luteolin had no effect on the LPS-induced increase in NF-κB DNA binding activity, it markedly reduced AP-1 transcription factor binding activity. Consistent with this finding, luteolin did not inhibit LPS-induced degradation of IκB-α but inhibited JNK phosphorylation.

Luteolin consumption reduced LPS-induced IL-6 in plasma 4 hours after injection. Furthermore, luteolin decreased the induction of IL-6 mRNA by LPS in the hippocampus but not in the cortex or cerebellum. Taken together, these data suggest luteolin inhibits LPS-induced IL-6 production in the brain by inhibiting the JNK signaling pathway and activation of AP-1 in microglia. Thus, luteolin may be useful for mitigating neuroinflammation (Jang et al., 2008).

Immunostimulatory and Anti-inflammatory

Luteolin (Lut) possesses significant anti-inflammatory activity in well-established models of acute and chronic inflammation, such as xylene-induced ear edema in mice (ED50= 107 mg/ kg), carrageenin-induced swellingof the ankle, acetic acid-induced pleurisy and croton oil-induced gaseous pouch granuloma in rats. Lut had a marked inhibitory effect on the inflammatory exudation, but did not affect the number of leucocytes. Its combined immunostimulatory and anti-inflammatory activity, and inhibitory effect upon immediate hypersensitive response, provide the pharmacologic bases for the beneficial effects of Lut in the treatment of chronic bronchitis (Chen et al., 1986).

Anti-inflammatory

Luteolin dose-dependently inhibited the expression and production of those inflammatory genes and mediators in macrophages stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Semi-quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay further confirmed the suppression of LPS-induced TNF- α, IL-6, iNOS and COX-2 gene expression by luteolin at a transcriptional level. Luteolin also reduced the DNA binding activity of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) in LPS-activated macrophages.

In addition, luteolin significantly inhibited the LPS-induced DNA binding activity of activating protein-1 (AP-1). It was also found that luteolin attenuated the LPS-mediated protein kinase B (Akt) and IKK phosphorylation, as well as reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. In sum, these data suggest that, by blocking NF-κB and AP-1 activation, luteolin acts to suppress the LPS-elicited inflammatory events in mouse alveolar macrophages, and this effect was mediated, at least in part, by inhibiting the generation of reactive oxygen species. These observations suggest a possible therapeutic application of this agent for treating inflammatory disorders in the lung (Chen et al., 2007).

Pancreatic Cancer; Chemo-enhancing

Simultaneous treatment or pre-treatment (0, 6, 24 and 42h) of flavonoids and chemotherapeutic drugs and various concentrations (0-50µM) were assessed using the MTS cell proliferation assay. Pre-treatment for 24 hours with 13µM of either Apigenin or Luteolin, followed by Gem for 36 h was optimal to inhibit cell proliferation.

Pre-treatment of cells with 11-19µM of either flavonoid for 24 hours resulted in 59%–73% growth inhibition when followed by Gem (10µM, 36 hours). Lut (15µM, 24 hours) pre-treatment followed by Gem (10µM, 36h), significantly decreased protein expression of nuclear GSK-3β and NF-κB p65 and increased pro-apoptotic cytosolic cytochrome c. Pre-treatment of human pancreatic cancer cells BxPC-3 with low concentrations of Lut effectively aid in the anti-proliferative activity of chemotherapeutic drugs (Johnson et al., 2013).

Ovarian Cancer

Recent studies further indicate that luteolin potently inhibits VEGF production and suppresses ovarian cancer cell metastasis in vitro. Lastly, oridonin and wogonin were suggested to suppress ovarian CSCs as is reflected by down-regulation of the surface marker EpCAM.

Unlike NSAIDS (non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs), well-documented clinical data for phyto-active compounds are lacking. In order to evaluate objectively the potential benefit of these compounds in the treatment of ovarian cancer, strategically designed, large scale studies are warranted (Chen et al., 2012).

Chemo-sensitizer

The sensitization effect of luteolin on cisplatin-induced apoptosis is p53 dependent, as such effect is only found in p53 wild-type cancer cells but not in p53 mutant cancer cells. Moreover, knockdown of p53 by small interfering RNA made p53 wild-type cancer cells resistant to luteolin and cisplatin. The critical role of c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK) was identified in regulation of p53 protein stability: luteolin activates JNK, and JNK then stabilizes p53 via phosphorylation, leading to reduced ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation.

An in vivo nude mice xenograft model confirmed that luteolin enhanced the cancer therapeutic activity of cisplatin via p53 stabilization and accumulation. In summary, data from this study reveal a novel molecular mechanism involved in the anti-cancer effects of luteolin and support its potential clinical application as a chemo-sensitizer in cancer therapy (Shi et al., 2007).

Breast Cancer; Chemo-sensitzer

Luteolin is a flavonoid that has been identified in many plant tissues and exhibits chemo-preventive or chemo-sensitizing properties against human breast cancer. However, the oncogenic molecules in human breast cancer cells that are inhibited by luteolin treatment have not been identified.

Relatively high levels of cyclin E2 (CCNE2) protein expression were detected in tamoxifen-resistant (TAM-R) MCF-7 cells. These results showed that the level of CCNE2 protein expression was specifically inhibited in luteolin-treated (5µM) TAM-R cells, either in the presence or absence of 4-OH-TAM (100nM). Combined treatment with 4-OH-TAM and luteolin synergistically sensitized the TAM-R cells to 4-OH-TAM. The results of this study suggest that luteolin can be used as a chemo-sensitizer to target the expression level of CCNE2 and that it could be a novel strategy to overcome TAM resistance in breast cancer patients (Tu et al., 2013).

References

Baliga MS, Jimmy R, Thilakchand KR, et al. (2013). Ocimum sanctum L (Holy Basil or Tulsi) and its phytochemicals in the prevention and treatment of cancer. Nutr Cancer, 65(1):26-35. doi: 10.1080/01635581.2013.785010.

Chen CY, Peng WH, Tsai KD and Hsu SL. (2007). Luteolin suppresses inflammation-associated gene expression by blocking NF- κ B and AP-1 activation pathway in mouse alveolar macrophages. Life Sciences, 81(23-24):1602-1614. doi:10.1016/j.lfs.2007.09.028

Chen MZ, Jin WZ, Dai LM, Xu SY. (1986). Effect of luteolin on inflammation and immune function. Chinese Journal of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1986-01.

Chen SS, Michael A, Butler-Manuel SA. (2012). Advances in the treatment of ovarian cancer: a potential role of anti-inflammatory phytochemicals. Discov Med, 13(68):7-17.

Jang S, Kelley KW, Johnson RW. (2008). Luteolin reduces IL-6 production in microglia by inhibiting JNK phosphorylation and activation of AP-1. PNAS, 105(21):7534-7539

Johnson JL, Gonzalez de Mejia E. (2013). Interactions between dietary flavonoids apigenin or luteolin and chemotherapeutic drugs to potentiate anti-proliferative effect on human pancreatic cancer cells, in vitro. Food Chem Toxicol, S0278-6915(13)00491-2. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2013.07.036.

Lim DY, Jeong Y, Tyner Al., Park JHY. (2007). Induction of cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in HT-29 human colon cancer cells by the dietary compound luteolin. Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol, 292: G66-G75. doi:10.1152/ajpgi.00248.2006.

Shi R, Huang Q, Zhu X, et al. (2007). Luteolin sensitizes the anti-cancer effect of cisplatin via c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase-mediated p53 phosphorylation and stabilization. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, 6(4):1338-1347. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-06-0638.

Tu SH, Ho CT, Liu MF, et al. (2013). Luteolin sensitizes drug-resistant human breast cancer cells to tamoxifen via the inhibition of cyclin E2 expression. Food Chem, 141(2):1553-61. doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.04.077.

Xagorari A, Papapetropoulos A, Mauromatis A, et al. (2001). Luteolin inhibits an endotoxin-stimulated phosphorylation cascade and pro-inflammatory cytokine production in macrophages. JPET, 296(1):181-187.

Genistein (See also Daidzien)

Cancer:
Breast, kidney, prostate, renal., liver, endometrial., ovarian

Action: Anti-angiogenesis, cell-cycle arrest, cancer stem cells, VEGF, radiotherapy, sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1)

Genistein is a natural isoflavone phytoestrogen present in a number of plants, including soy, fava, and kudzu (Glycine max [(L.) Merr.], Vicia faba (L.), Pueraria lobata [(Willd.) Ohwi]).

Phytoestrogens

Phytoestrogens have been investigated at the epidemiological., clinical and molecular levels to determine their potential health benefits. The two major groups of phytoestrogens, isoflavones and lignans, are abundant in soy products and flax respectively, but are also present in a variety of other foods. It is thought that these estrogen-like compounds may protect against chronic diseases, such as hormone-dependent cancers, cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis (Stark & Madar, 2002).

S-Equol Production and Isoflavone Metabolism

S-Equol and Breast Cancer

Differences in ability to metabolize daidzein to equol might help explain inconsistent findings about isoflavones and breast cancer. Tseng et al. (2013) examined equol-producing status in relation to breast density, a marker of breast cancer risk, and evaluated whether an association of isoflavone intake with breast density differs by equol-producing status in a sample of Chinese immigrant women. In their sample, 30% were classified as equol producers. In adjusted linear regression models, equol producers had significantly lower mean dense tissue area (32.8 vs. 37.7 cm(2), P = 0.03) and lower mean percent breast density (32% vs. 35%, P = 0.03) than nonproducers. Significant inverse associations of isoflavone intake with dense area and percent density were apparent, but only in equol producers (interaction P = 0.05 for both).

Although these findings warrant confirmation in a larger sample, they offer a possible explanation for the inconsistent findings about soy intake and breast density and possibly breast cancer risk as well. The findings further suggest the importance of identifying factors that influence equol-producing status and exploring appropriate targeting of interventions.

S-Equol and Dietary Factors

S-(-)equol, an intestinally derived metabolite of the soy isoflavone daidzein, is proposed to enhance the efficacy of soy diets. Setchell et al. (2013) performed a comprehensive dietary analysis of 143 macro- and micro-nutrients in 159 healthy adults to determine whether the intake of specific nutrients favors equol production. Three-day diet records were collected and analyzed using Nutrition Data System for Research software and S-(-)equol was measured in urine by mass spectrometry.

Equol producers accounted for 29.6% of participants. No significant differences were observed for total protein, carbohydrate, fat, saturated fat, or fiber intakes between equol producers and nonproducers. However, principal component analysis revealed differences in several nutrients, including higher intakes of polyunsaturated fatty acids (P = 0.039), maltose (P = 0.02), and vitamins A (P = 0.01) and E (P = 0.035) and a lower intake of total cholesterol (P = 0.010) in equol producers.

Subtle differences in some nutrients may influence the ability to produce equol.

S-Equol and Dietary Factors; Fats

The soy isoflavones, daidzein and genistein, and the lignans, matairesinol and secoisolariciresinol, are phytoestrogens metabolized extensively by the intestinal microflora. Considerable important evidence is already available that shows extensive interindividual variation in isoflavone metabolism. There was a 16-fold variation in total isoflavonoid excretion in urine after the high-isoflavone treatment period. The variation in urinary equol excretion was greatest (664-fold), and subjects fell into two groups: poor equol excretors and good equol excretors (36%). A significant negative correlation was found between the proportion of energy from fat in the habitual diet and urinary equol excretion (r = -0.55; p = 0.012). Good equol excretors consumed less fat as percentage of energy than poor excretors (26 +/- 2.3% compared with 35 +/- 1.6%, p < 0.01) and more carbohydrate as percentage of energy than poor excretors (55 +/- 2.9% compared with 47 +/- 1.7%, p < 0.05).

It is suggested that the dietary fat intake decreases the capacity of gut microbial flora to synthesize equol (Rowland et al., 2000).

Isoflavones and Fermented Soy Foods

Serum concentrations of total isoflavones after 1–4 hours were significantly higher in the aglycone-rich fermented soybeans (Fsoy) group than in the glucoside-rich non-fermented soybeans (Soy) group. The Fsoy group showed significantly higher maximum concentration (Cmax: 2.79 ± 0.13 vs 1.74 ± 0.13 µmol L(-1) ) and area under the curve (AUC(0-24 h) : 23.78 ± 2.41 vs 19.95 ± 2.03 µmol day L(-1) ) and lower maximum concentration time (Tmax: 1.00 ± 0.00 vs 5.00 ± 0.67 h) compared with the Soy group. The cumulative urinary excretion of total isoflavones after 2 hours was significantly higher in the Fsoy group than in the Soy group. Individual isoflavones (daidzein, genistein and glycitein) showed similar trends to total isoflavones. Equol (a metabolite from daidzein) did not differ between the two groups.

The results of this study demonstrated that the isoflavones of aglycone-rich Fsoy were absorbed faster and in greater amounts than those of glucoside-rich Soy in postmenopausal Japanese women (Okabe et al., 2011).

Phytoestrogens and Breast Cancer; ER+/ER-, ER α /ER β

Dietary-derived Anti-angiogenic Compounds

Consumption of a plant-based diet can prevent the development and progression of chronic diseases that are associated with extensive neovascularization; however, little is known about the mechanisms. To determine whether prevention might be associated with dietary-derived angiogenesis inhibitors, the urine of healthy human subjects consuming a plant-based diet was fractionated and the fractions examined for their ability to inhibit the proliferation of vascular endothelial cells.

The isoflavonoid genistein was the most potent, and inhibited endothelial cell proliferation and in vitro angiogenesis at concentrations giving half-maximal inhibition of 5 and 150 microM, respectively. Genistein concentrations in urine of subjects consuming a plant-based diet are in the micromolar range, while those of subjects consuming a traditional Western diet are lower by a factor of > 30. The high excretion of genistein in urine of vegetarians and in addition to these results suggest that genistein may contribute to the preventive effect of a plant-based diet on chronic diseases, including solid tumors, by inhibiting neovascularization.

Thus, genistein may represent a member of a new class of dietary-derived anti-angiogenic compounds (Fotsis et al., 1993).

ERβ as a Down-regulator of ER+ Breast Cancer

The estrogen receptor (ER) isoform known as ERβ has become the focus of intense investigation as a potential drug target. The existence of clear-cut differences in ERβ and ERα expression suggests that tissues could be differentially targeted with ligands selective for either isoform (Couse et al., 1997; Enmark et al., 1997). In particular, the fact that ER β is widely expressed but not the primary estrogen receptor in, for example, the uterus (where estrogenic effects are mediated via ERα) (Harris, Katzenellenbogen, & Katzenellenbogen, 2002) opens up the possibility of targeting other tissues while avoiding certain classical estrogenic effects.

A major advance toward understanding how some phytoestrogens achieve modest ERβ selectivity was the X-ray structure determination of the ERβ ligand binding domain (LBD) complexed with genistein (GEN) (Pike et al., 1999), a 40-fold ERβ-selective ligand (Harris et al., 2002). This study clearly showed that there are only two residue substitutions in close proximity to GEN: ERα Leu384 is replaced by ER β Met336, and ERα Met421 is replaced by ER β Ile373.

ERbeta works as counter partner of ERalpha through inhibition of the transactivating function of ERalpha by heterodimerization, distinct regulation on several specific promoters by ERalpha or ERbeta, and ERbeta-specific regulated genes which are probably related to its anti-proliferative properties. Epidemiological studies of hormone replacement therapy and isoflavone (genistein) consumption indicate the possible contribution of ERbeta-specific signaling in breast cancer prevention. A selective estrogen receptor modulator, which works as an antagonist of ERalpha and an agonist of ERbeta, may be a promising chemo-preventive treatment (Saji, Hirose, & Toi, 2005).

Genistein and Apoptosis

The association between consumption of genistein containing soybean products and lower risk of breast cancer suggests a cancer chemo-preventive role for genistein. Consistent with this suggestion, exposing cultured human breast cancer cells to genistein inhibits cell proliferation, although this is not completely understood. To better understand how genistein works, the ability of genistein to induce apoptosis was compared in phenotypically dissimilar MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells that express the wild-type and mutant p53 gene, respectively.

After 6 days of incubation with 50 microM genistein, MCF-7, but not MDA-MB-231 cells, showed morphological signs of apoptosis. Marginal proteolytic cleavage of poly-(ADP-ribose)-polymerase and significant DNA fragmentation were also detected in MCF-7 cells.

In elucidating these findings, it was determined that after 2 days of incubation with genistein, MCF-7, but not MDA-MB-231 cells, had significantly higher levels of p53. Accordingly, the expression of certain proteins modulated by p53 was also studied. Levels of p21 increased in both of the genistein-treated cell lines, suggesting that p21 gene expression was activated but in a p53-independent manner; whereas no significant changes in levels of the pro-apoptotic protein, Bax, were found. In MCF-7 cells, levels of the anti-apoptotic protein, Bcl-2, decreased slightly at 18–24 hours but then increased considerably after 48 hours. Hence, the Bax:Bcl-2 ratio initially increased but later decreased.

Data suggests that at the concentration tested, MCF-7 cells, in contrast to MDA-MB-231 cells, were sensitive to the induction of apoptosis by genistein. However, the roles of Bax and Bcl-2 are unclear (Xu & Loo, 2001).

Genistein Derivatives and Breast Cancer Inhibition

Genistein binds to estrogen receptors and stimulates growth at concentrations that would be achieved by a high soy diet, but inhibits growth at high experimental concentrations.

The estrogen receptor (ER) is a major target for the treatment of breast cancer cells. Genistein, a soy isoflavone, possesses a structure similar to estrogen and can both mimic and antagonize estrogen effects although at high concentrations it inhibits breast cancer cell proliferation. Hence, to enhance the anti-cancer activity of Genistein at lower concentrations, seven structurally modified derivatives of Genistein based on the structural requirements for an optimal anti-cancer effect were synthesised. Among those seven, three derivatives showed high anti-proliferative activity with IC(50) levels in the range of 1-2.5 µM, i.e., at much lower concentrations range than Genistein itself, in three ER-positive breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7, 21PT and T47D) studied. In our analysis, we noticed that at IC(50) concentrations, the MA-6, MA-8 and MA-19 Genistein derivatives induced apoptosis, inhibited ER-α messenger RNA expression and increased the ratio of ER-β to ER-α levels in a manner comparable to that of the parent compound Genistein.

Of note, these three modified Genistein derivatives exerted their effects at concentrations 10–15 times lower than the parent compound, decreasing the likelihood of significant ER- α pathway activation, which has been a concern for Genistein. Hence these compounds might play a useful role in breast cancer chemoprevention (Marik et al., 2011).

Genistein and ER α

To determine the effects of low-dose, long-term genistein exposure MCF-7 breast cancer cells were cultured in 10nM genistein for 10-12 weeks and investigated whether or not this long-term genistein treatment (LTGT) altered the expression of estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) and the activity of the PI3-K/Akt signaling pathway. This is known to be pivotal in the signaling of mitogens such as oestradiol (E(2)), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and epidermal growth factor (EGF). LTGT significantly reduced the growth promoting effects of E(2) and increased the dose-dependent growth-inhibitory effect of the PI3-K inhibitor, LY 294002, compared to untreated control MCF-7 cells.

This was associated with a significant decreased protein expression of total Akt and phosphorylated Akt but not ERalpha. Rapamycin, an inhibitor of one of the downstream targets of Akt, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), also dose-dependently inhibited growth but the response to this drug was similar in LTGT and control MCF-7 cells. The protein expression of liver receptor homologue-1 (LRH1), an orphan nuclear receptor implicated in tumorigenesis was not affected by LTGT.

These results show that LTGT results in a down-regulation of the PI3-K/Akt signaling pathway and may be a mechanism through which genistein could offer protection against breast cancer (Anastasius et al., 2009).

Genistein and ER+/ER-

Genistein was found to cause a dose-dependent growth inhibition of the two hormone-sensitive cell lines T47D and ZR75.1 and of the two hormone-independent cell lines MDAMB-231 and BT20. Flow cytometric analysis of cells treated for 4 days with 15 and 30 M genistein showed a dose-dependent accumulation in the G2M phase of the cell-cycle. At the highest tested concentration, there was a 7-fold increase in the percentage of cells in G2M (63%) with respect to the control (9%) in the case of T47D cells and a 2.4-fold increase in the case of BT20. An intermediate 4-fold accumulation was observed in the case of MDAMB-231 and ZR75.1. The G2M arrest was coupled with a parallel depletion of the G0/G1 phase.

To understand the mechanism of action underlying the block in G2M induced by genistein, Cappelletti et al. (2000) investigated the expression and the activity of cyclins and of cyclin-dependent kinases specifically involved in the G2M transition. As expected, p34cdc-2 expression, monitored by Western blotting, was unaffected by genistein treatment in all cell lines. With the exception of the T47D cell line, we revealed an increase in the tyrosine phosphorylated form of p34, suggesting an inactivation of the p34cdc-2 catalytic activity consequent to treatment of cells with genistein. In fact, immunoprecipitates from genistein-treated MDAMB-231 and BT20 cells displayed a 4-fold decrease in kinase activity evaluated using the histone H1 as substrate.

Conversely, no variation in kinase activity was observed between treated and untreated ZR75.1 cells despite the increase in p34 phosphorylation. In cells treated with 30 M genistein, cyclin B1 (p62) increased 2.8-,8-and 103-fold, respectively, in BT20, MDAMB-231, and ZR75.1 cells, suggesting an accumulation of the p62, which is instead rapidly degraded in cycling cells. No effects were observed on cyclin expression in T47D cells.

We therefore conclude that genistein causes a G2M arrest in breast cancer cell lines, but that such growth arrest is not necessarily coupled with deregulation of the p34cdc-2/cyclin B1 complex only in all of the studied cell lines.

Genistein and ER+/ER-; MDR

Genistein is a potent inhibitor of the growth of the human breast carcinoma cell lines, MDA-468 (estrogen receptor negative), and MCF-7 and MCF-7-D-40 (estrogen receptor positive) (IC50 values from 6.5 to 12.0 µg/ml). The presence of the estrogen receptor is not required for the isoflavones to inhibit tumor cell growth (MDA-468 vs MCF-7 cells). In addition, the effects of genistein and biochanin A are not attenuated by over expression of the multi-drug resistance gene product (MCF-7-D40 vs MCF-7 cells (Peterson et al., 1991).

Studies have shown that genistein exerts multiple suppressive effects on both estrogen receptor positive (ER+) as well as estrogen receptor negative (ER-) human breast carcinoma lines suggesting that the mechanisms of these effects may be independent of ER pathways.

In the present study however Shao et al. (2000) provide evidence that in the ER+ MCF-7, T47D and 549 lines but not in the ER-MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MB-468 lines both presumed 'ER-dependent' and 'ER-independent' actions of genistein are mediated through ER pathways. Genistein's anti-proliferative effects are estrogen dependent in these ER+ lines, being more pronounced in estrogen-containing media and in the presence of exogenous 17-beta estradiol. Genistein also inhibits the expression of ER-downstream genes including pS2 and TGF-beta in these ER+ lines and this inhibition is also dependent on the presence of estrogen. Genistein inhibits estrogen-induced protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) activity. Genistein is only a weak transcriptional activator and actually decreases ERE-CAT levels induced by 17-beta estradiol in the ER+ lines.

Genistein also decreases steady state ER mRNA only in the presence of estrogen in the ER+ lines thereby manifesting another suppression of and through the ER pathway. Their observations resurrect the hypothesis that genistein functions as a 'good estrogen' in ER+ breast carcinomas. Since chemo-preventive effects of genistein would be targeted to normal ER-positive ductal-lobular cells of the breast, this 'good estrogen' action of genistein is most relevant to our understanding of chemoprevention.

Genistein and Concentration

The anti-proliferative activity of the isoflavones daidzein and genistein were investigated in three breast cancer cell lines with different patterns of estrogen receptor (ER) and c erbB 2 protein expression (ERα positive MCF 7 cells, c erbB 2 positive SK BR 3 cells and ERα/c erbB 2 positive ZR 75 1). After treatment at various concentrations (1 200 µM for 72 hours), the effect of daidzein and genistein on the proliferation of different cell types varied; these effects were found to be associated with ERα and c erbB 2 expression. Daidzein and genistein exhibited biphasic effects (stimulatory or inhibitory) on proliferation and ERα expression in MCF 7 cells. Although 1 µM daidzein significantly stimulated cell growth, ERα expression was unaffected. However, genistein showed marked increases in proliferation and ERα expression after exposure to <10 µM genistein.

Notably, the inhibition of cell proliferation by 200 µM genistein was greater compared to that by daidzein at the same concentration. Daidzein and genistein significantly inhibited proliferation of SK BR 3 and ZR 75 1 cells in a dose-dependent manner. In addition, ERα and c erbB 2 expression was reduced by daidzein and genistein in both SK BR 3 and ZR 75 1 cells in a dose-dependent manner. However, the effect of genistein was greater compared to that of daidzein.

In conclusion, the isoflavones daidzein and genistein showed anti breast cancer activity, which was associated with expression of the ERα and c erbB 2 receptors (Choi et al., 2013).

ER- α / ER β Receptors

Isoflavones are phytoestrogens that have been linked to both beneficial as well as adverse effects in relation to cell proliferation and cancer risks. The mechanisms that could be involved in this dualistic mode of action were investigated. One mechanism relates to the different ultimate cellular effects of activation of estrogen receptor (ER) α, promoting cell proliferation, and of ERβ, promoting apoptosis, with the major soy isoflavones genistein and daidzein activating especially ERβ.

A second mode of action includes the role of epigenetics, including effects of isoflavones on DNA methylation, histone modification and miRNA expression patterns. The overview presented reveals that we are only at the start of unraveling the complex underlying mode of action for effects of isoflavones, both beneficial or adverse, on cell proliferation and cancer risks. It is evident that whatever model system will be applied, its relevance to human tissues with respect to ERα and ERβ levels, co-repressor and co-activator characteristics as well as its relevance to human exposure regimens, needs to be considered and defined (Rietjens et al., 2013).

Genistein and ER+/ER-, ER- α / ER β Receptors

A novel mechanism of adipokine, adiponectin (APN) -mediated signaling that influences mammary epithelial cell proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis to modify breast cancer risk has been identified. It was demonstrated that early dietary exposure to soy protein isolate induced mammary tissue APN production without corresponding effects on systemic APN levels. In estrogen receptor (ER)-negative MCF-10A cells, recombinant APN promoted lobuloalveolar differentiation by inhibiting oncogenic signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 activity.

In ER-positive HC11 cells, recombinant APN increased ERβ expression, inhibited cell proliferation, and induced apoptosis. Using the estrogen-responsive 4X-estrogen response element promoter-reporter construct to assess ER transactivation and small interfering RNA targeting of ERα and ERβ, Rahal et al. (2011) show that APN synergized with the soy phytoestrogen genistein to promote ERβ signaling in the presence of estrogen (17β-estradiol) and ERβ-specific agonist 2,3-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-propionitrile and to oppose ERα signaling in the presence of the ERα-specific agonist 4,4',4'-(4-propyl-(1H)-pyrazole-1,3,5-triyl)trisphenol.

The enhancement of ERβ signaling with APN + genistein co-treatments was associated with induction of apoptosis, increased expression of pro-apoptotic/prodifferentiation genes (Bad, p53, and Pten), and decreased anti-apoptotic (Bcl2 and survivin) transcript levels. These results suggest that mammary-derived APN can influence adjacent epithelial function by ER-dependent and ER-independent mechanisms that are consistent with reduction of breast cancer risk and suggest local APN induction by dietary factors as a targeted approach for promotion of breast health.

Genistein and Non-breast Cancer

Genistein Concentrations; Endometrial Cancer

The influence of two phytoestrogens (Genistein and Daidzein) on estrogen-related receptor-α in endometrial cancer cell line Ishikawa was investigated on the proliferation of the cells in this cell line. Ishikawa cells were incubated with different concentrations of Genistein and Daidzein (40, 20, 10, 5 µmol/L) for 24 hours or 48 hours, followed by Real-Time PCR for analyzing the expression of ERR-α mRNA in the cell line. MTT assay was then performed to evaluate the proliferation of Ishikawa cells.

The expression level of ERR-α mRNA in Ishikawa cells was higher than that of the control group after being dealt for 24 hours or 48 hours with Genistein, and the concentration 20 µmol/L was most effective. Nevertheless, this up-regulation was blocked when the cells were treated with 40 µmol/L Genistein. Lower concentration (5, 10 µmol/L) Genistein had depressant effect on proliferation of the cells, while higher concentrations (20, 40 µmol/L) had stimulant effect. After being treated with different concentrations of Daidzein, the expression of ERR- α mRNA in all experimental groups was significantly higher than that in the control group. In the 24 hour group, the concentration 40 µmol/L had most obvious effect; but in the 48 hour group, the concentration 20 µmol/L had most obvious effect, and this up-regulation was blocked when the concentration was elevated to 40 µmol/L.

Noticeably, all concentrations of Daidzein had depressant effect on the proliferation of Ishikawa cells in both 24 hour and 48 hour groups. In the 24 hour group, lower concentrations were more effective, but in the 48 hour group, concentration showed no significant effect. In lower concentrations, both Genistein and Daidzein have up-regulation effect on the expression of ERR-α, and block the proliferation of Ishikawa cells; but in higher concentrations, the up-regulation effect on ERR-α mRNA expression by these two phytoestrogens is not obvious. Genistein stimulates the proliferation of lshikawa cells in higher concentrations, while Daidzein suppresses the proliferation, especially in lower concentrations (Xin et al., 2009).

Genistein and VEGF; Ovarian Cancer

Genistein represses NF-kappaB (NF-κB), a pro-inflammatory transcription factor, and inhibits pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6 in epithelial ovarian cancer. Additionally, it has been shown to stabilize p53 protein, sensitize TRAIL (TNF receptor apoptosis-inducing ligand) induce apoptosis, and prevent or delay chemotherapy-resistance. Recent studies further indicate that genistein potently inhibits VEGF production and suppresses ovarian cancer cell metastasis in vitro.

Based on widely published in vitro and mouse-model data, some anti-inflammatory phytochemicals appear to exhibit activity in modulating the tumor microenvironment. Specifically, apiegenin, baicalein, curcumin, EGCG, genistein, luteolin, oridonin, quercetin, and wogonin repress NF-kappaB (NF-κB, a pro-inflammatory transcription factor) and inhibit pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6. Recent studies further indicate that apigenin, genistein, kaempferol, luteolin, and quercetin potently inhibit VEGF production and suppress ovarian cancer cell metastasis in vitro. Lastly, oridonin and wogonin were suggested to suppress ovarian CSCs as is reflected by down-regulation of the surface marker EpCAM (Chen, Michael, & Butler-Manuel, 2012).

Renal Cell Carcinoma, Prostate Cancer; Radiotherapy

The KCI-18 RCC cell line was generated from a patient with papillary renal cell carcinoma. Tumor cells metastasize from the primary renal tumor to the lungs, liver and mesentery mimicking the progression of RCC in humans. Treatment of established kidney tumors with genistein demonstrated a tendency to stimulate the growth of the primary kidney tumor and increase the incidence of metastasis to the mesentery lining the bowel. In contrast, when given in conjunction with kidney tumor irradiation, genistein significantly inhibited the growth and progression of established kidney tumors. These findings confirm the potentiation of radiotherapy by genistein in the orthotopic RCC model as previously shown in orthotopic models of prostate cancer. These studies in both RCC and prostate tumor models demonstrate that the combination of genistein with primary tumor irradiation is a more effective and safer therapeutic approach as the tumor growth and progression are inhibited both in the primary and metastatic sites (Gilda et al., 2007).

Cell-cycle Arrest

Genistein treatment increased Wee1 levels and decreased phospho-Wee1 (Ser 642). Moreover, genistein substantially decreased the Ser473 and Thr308 phosphorylation of Akt and up-regulated PTEN expression. Down-regulation of PTEN by siRNA in genistein-treated cells increased phospho-Wee1 (Ser642), whereas it decreased phospho-Cdc2 (Tyr15), resulting in decreased G2/M cell-cycle-arrest. Therefore, induction of G2/M cell-cycle arrest by genistein involved up-regulation of PTEN (Liu et al., 2013).

Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs)

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are cells that exist within a tumor with a capacity for self-renewal and an ability to differentiate, giving rise to heterogeneous populations of cancer cells. These cells are increasingly being implicated in resistance to conventional therapeutics and have also been implicated in tumor recurrence. Several cellular signaling pathways including Notch, Wnt, phosphoinositide-3-kinase-Akt-mammalian target of rapamycin pathways, and known markers such as CD44, CD133, CD166, ALDH, etc. have been associated with CSCs.

Here, we have reviewed our current understanding of self-renewal pathways and factors that help in the survival of CSCs with special emphasis on those that have been documented to be modulated by well characterized natural agents such as curcumin, sulforaphane, resveratrol, genistein, and epigallocatechin gallate (Dandawate et al., 2013).

Genistein and Sex Hormone-binding Globulin (SHBG)

Studies have indicated a correlation between a high level of urinary lignans and isoflavonoid phytoestrogens, particularly genistein, and a low incidence of hormone-dependent cancers, such as breast and prostate cancer. Previously it has been observed that a vegetarian diet is associated with high plasma levels of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), reducing clearance of sex hormones and probably risk of breast and prostate cancer. In the present study we investigated the in vitro effect of genistein on the production of SHBG by human hepatocarcinoma (Hep-G2) cells in culture and its effect on cell proliferation.

It has additionally been found that genistein not only significantly increases the SHBG production by Hep-G2 cells, but also suppresses the proliferation of those cancer cells already at a stage when SHBG production continues to be high. It is hence concluded that, in addition to the lignan enterolactone, the most abundant urinary isoflavonoid genistein stimulates SHBG production and inhibits Hep-G2 cancer cell proliferation (Mousavi et al., 1993).

Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 (IGF-1); Prostate Cancer

Elevated levels of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) are associated with an increased risk of several different cancers, including prostate cancer. Inhibition of IGF-1 and the downstream signaling pathways mediated by the activation of the IGF-1 receptor (IGF-1R) may be involved in inhibiting prostate carcinogenesis. Genistein treatment caused a significant inhibition of IGF-1-stimulated cell growth. Flow cytometry analysis revealed that genistein significantly decreased the number of IGF-1-stimulated cells in the G0/G1 phase of the cell-cycle. In IGF-1-treated cells, genistein effectively inhibited the phosphorylation of IGF-1R and the phosphorylation of its downstream targets, such as Src, Akt, and glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSk-3β). IGF-1 treatment decreased the levels of E-cadherin but increased the levels of β-catenin and cyclin D1.

However, genistein treatment greatly attenuated IGF-1-induced β-catenin signaling that correlated with increasing the levels of E-cadherin and decreasing cyclin D1 levels in PC-3 cells. In addition, genistein inhibited T-cell factor/lymphoid enhancer factor (TCF/LEF)-dependent transcriptional activity. These results showed that genistein effectively inhibited cell growth in IGF-1-stimulated PC-3 cells, possibly by inhibiting downstream of IGF-1R activation (Lee et al., 2012).

Sex Hormone-binding Globulin (SHBG); Hepatoma

Sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) is the main transport binding protein for sex steroid hormones in plasma and regulates their accessibility to target cells. Plasma SHBG is secreted by the liver under the control of hormones and nutritional factors. In the human hepatoma cell line (HepG2), thyroid and estrogenic hormones, and a variety of drugs including the anti-estrogen tamoxifen, the phytoestrogen, genistein and mitotane (Op'DDD) increase SHBG production and SHBG gene promoter activity. In contrast, monosaccharides (glucose or fructose) effectively decrease SHBG expression by inducing lipogenesis, which reduces hepatic HNF-4alpha levels, a transcription factor that plays a critical role in controlling the SHBG promoter. Interestingly, diminishing hepatic lipogenesis and free fatty acid liver biosynthesis also appear to be associated with the positive effects of thyroid hormones and PPARgamma antagonists on SHBG expression.

This mechanism provides a biological explanation for why SHBG is a sensitive biomarker of insulin resistance and the metabolic syndrome, and why low plasma SHBG levels are a risk factor for developing hyperglycemia and type 2 diabetes, especially in women (Pugeat et al., 2009).

Cancer: Pancreatic

Pancreatic cancer remains the fourth most common cause of cancer related death in the United States. Therefore, novel strategies for the prevention and treatment are urgently needed. Genistein is a prominent isoflavonoid found in soy products and has been proposed to be responsible for lowering the rate of pancreatic cancer in Asians. However, the molecular mechanism(s) by which genistein elicits its effects on pancreatic cancer cells has not been fully elucidated.

Wang et al., (2006) have previously shown that genistein induces apoptosis and inhibits the activation of nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) pathway. Moreover, Notch signaling is known to play a critical role in maintaining the balance between cell proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis, and thereby may contribute to the development of pancreatic cancer. Hence, in our study, they investigated whether there is any cross talk between Notch and NF-kappaB during genistein-induced apoptosis in BxPC-3 pancreatic cancer cells. They found that genistein inhibits cell growth and induces apoptotic processes in BxPC-3 pancreatic cancer cells.

This was partly due to inhibition of Notch-1 activity. BxPC-3 cells transfected with Notch-1 cDNA showed induction of NF-kappaB activity, and this was inhibited by genistein treatment. From these results, we conclude that the inhibition of Notch-1 and NF-kappaB activity and their cross talk provides a novel mechanism by which genistein inhibits cell growth and induces apoptotic processes in pancreatic cancer cells.

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Curcumin

Cancer: Colorectal., prostate, pancreatic

Action: MDR, chemo-preventive activity, anti-inflammatory, attenuation of immune suppression

Chemo-preventive Activity

Curcumin is a naturally occurring, dietary polyphenolic phytochemical that is under preclinical trial evaluation for cancer-preventive drug development. It is derived from the rhizome of Curcuma longa L. and has both anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory properties; it inhibits chemically-induced carcinogenesis in the skin, forestomach, and colon when it is administered during initiation and/or postinitiation stages. Chemo-preventive activity of curcumin is observed when it is administered prior to, during, and after carcinogen treatment as well as when it is given only during the promotion/progression phase (starting late in premalignant stage) of colon carcinogenesis (Kawamori et al., 1999)

Anti-inflammatory

With respect to inflammation, in vitro, it inhibits the activation of free radical-activated transcription factors, such as nuclear factor κB (NFκB) and AP-1, and reduces the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), and interleukin-8 (Chan et al., 1998)

Prostate Cancer

In addition, NF-kappaB and AP-1 may play a role in the survival of prostate cancer cells, and curcumin may abrogate their survival mechanisms (Mukhopadhyay et al., 2001).

Pancreatic Cancer

In patients suffering from pancreatic cancer, orally-administered curcumin was found to be well-tolerated and despite limited absorption, had a reasonable impact on biological activity in some patients. This was attributed to its potent nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) and tumor-inhibitory properties, against advanced pancreatic cancer (Dhillon et al., 2008)

MDR

Curcumin, the major component in Curcuma longa (Jianghuang), inhibited the transport activity of all three major ABC transporters, i.e. Pgp, MRP1 and ABCG2 (Ganta et al., 2009).

Curcumin reversed MDR of doxorubicin or daunorubicin in K562/DOX cell line and decreased Pgp expression in a time-dependent manner (Chang et al., 2006). Curcumin enhanced the sensitivity to vincristine by the inhibition of Pgp in SGC7901/VCR cell line (Tang et al., 2005). Moreover, curcumin was useful in reversing MDR associated with a decrease in bcl-2 and survivin expression but an increase in caspase-3 expression in COC1/DDP cell line (Ying et al., 2007).

The cytotoxicity of vincristine and paclitaxel were also partially restored by curcumin in resistant KBV20C cell line. Curcumin derivatives reversed MDR by inhibiting Pgp efflux (Um et al., 2008). A chlorine substituent at the meta-or para-position on benzamide improved MDR reversal [72]. Bisdemethoxycurcumin modified from curcumin resulted in greater inhibition of Pgp expression (Limtrakul et al., 2004).

Attenuation of Immune Suppression

Curcumin (a chalcone) exhibited toxicity to human neural stem cells (hNSCs). Although oridonin (a diterpene) showed a null toxicity toward hNSCs, it repressed the enzymatic function only marginally in contrast to its potent cytotoxicity in various cancer cell lines. While the mode of action of the enzyme-polyphenol complex awaits to be investigated, the sensitivity of enzyme inhibition was compared to the anti-proliferative activities toward three cancer cell lines.

The IC50s obtained from both sets of the experiments indicate that they are in the vicinity of micromolar concentration with the enzyme inhibition slightly more active.

These results suggest that attenuation of immune suppression via inhibition of IDO-1 enzyme activity may be one of the important mechanisms of polyphenols in chemoprevention or combinatorial cancer therapy (Chen et al., 2012).

Cancer Stem Cells

In cancers that appear to follow the stem cell model, pathways such as Wnt, Notch and Hedgehog may be targeted with natural compounds such as curcumin or drugs to reduce the risk of initiation of new tumors. Disease progression of established tumors could also potentially be inhibited by targeting the tumorigenic stem cells alone, rather than aiming to reduce overall tumor size.

Cancer treatments could be evaluated by assessing stem cell markers before and after treatment. Targeted stem cell specific treatment of cancers may not result in 'complete' or 'partial' responses radiologically, as stem cell targeting may not reduce the tumor bulk, but eliminate further tumorigenic potential. These changes are discussed using breast, pancreatic, and lung cancer as examples (Reddy et al., 2011).

Multiple Cancer Effects; Cell-signaling

Curcumin has been shown to interfere with multiple cell signaling pathways, including cell-cycle (cyclin D1 and cyclin E), apoptosis (activation of caspases and down-regulation of anti-apoptotic gene products), proliferation (HER-2, EGFR, and AP-1), survival (PI3K/AKT pathway), invasion (MMP-9 and adhesion molecules), angiogenesis (VEGF), metastasis (CXCR-4) and inflammation (NF- κB, TNF, IL-6, IL-1, COX-2, and 5-LOX).

The activity of curcumin reported against leukemia and lymphoma, gastrointestinal cancers, genitourinary cancers, breast cancer, ovarian cancer, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, lung cancer, melanoma, neurological cancers, and sarcoma reflects its ability to affect multiple targets (Anand et al., 2008).

Anti-inflammatory; Cell-signaling

Curcumin, a liposoluble polyphenolic pigment isolated from the rhizomes of Curcuma longa L. (Zingiberaceae), is another potential candidate for new anti-cancer drug development. Curcumin has been reported to influence many cell-signaling pathways involved in tumor initiation and proliferation. Curcumin inhibits COX-2 activity, cyclin D1 and MMPs overexpresion, NF-kB, STAT and TNF-alpha signaling pathways and regulates the expression of p53 tumor suppressing gene.

Curcumin is well-tolerated but has a reduced systemic bioavailability. Polycurcumins (PCurc 8) and curcumin encapsulated in biodegradable polymeric nanoparticles showed higher bioavailability than curcumin together with a significant tumor growth inhibition in both in vitro and in vivo studies (Cretu et al., 2012). Curcumin also sensitizes tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-induced apoptosis through reactive oxygen species-mediated up-regulation of death receptor 5 (DR5) (Jung et al., 2005).

Curcumin and bioavailability

Curcumin, a major constituent of the spice turmeric, suppresses expression of the enzyme cyclooxygenase 2 (Cox-2) and has cancer chemo-preventive properties in rodents. It possesses poor systemic availability. Marczylo et al. (2007) explored whether formulation with phosphatidylcholine increases the oral bioavailability or affects the metabolite profile of curcumin. Their results suggest that curcumin formulated with phosphatidylcholine furnishes higher systemic levels of parent agent than unformulated curcumin.

Curcuminoids are poorly water-soluble compounds and to overcome some of the drawbacks of curcuminoids, Aditya et al. (2012) explored the potential of liposomes for the intravenous delivery of curcuminoids. The curcuminoids-loaded liposomes were formulated from phosphatidylcholine (soy PC). Curcumin/curcuminoids were encapsulated in phosphatidylcholine vesicles with high yields. Vesicles in the size range around 200 nm were selected for stability and cell experiments. Liposomal curcumin were found to be twofold to sixfold more potent than corresponding curcuminoids. Moreover, the mixture of curcuminoids was found to be more potent than pure curcumin in regard to the anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory activities (Basnet et al., 2012). Results suggest that the curcumin-phosphatidylcholine complex improves the survival rate by increasing the anti-oxidant activity (Inokuma et al., 2012). Recent clinical trials on the effectiveness of phosphatidylcholine formulated curcumin in treating eye diseases have also shown promising results, making curcumin a potent therapeutic drug candidate for inflammatory and degenerative retinal and eye diseases (Wang et al., 2012). Data demonstrate that treatment with curcumin dissolved in sesame oil or phosphatidylcholine curcumin improves the peripheral neuropathy of R98C mice by alleviating endoplasmic reticulum stress, by reducing the activation of unfolded protein response (Patzk- et al., 2012).

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